How does 3 Mbps Transfer Per Month compare to 250gig

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  • DirtyDave
    Confirmed User
    • Jul 2003
    • 198

    #1

    How does 3 Mbps Transfer Per Month compare to 250gig

    I'm confused by the transfer ratings that are used by some hosting plans.

    If I'm on a virtual plan with 250gb/month, how does that compare to 3 Mbps Transfer Per Month?

    So how does a flat number method compare to a MB/sec per month?

    Thanx, David.
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  • stickyfingerz
    Doin fine
    • Oct 2005
    • 24984

    #2
    Originally posted by dsatchell
    I'm confused by the transfer ratings that are used by some hosting plans.

    If I'm on a virtual plan with 250gb/month, how does that compare to 3 Mbps Transfer Per Month?

    So how does a flat number method compare to a MB/sec per month?

    Thanx, David.
    roughly 1mbps =s 320GB

    Comment

    • KrisKross
      Confirmed User
      • Jan 2006
      • 5025

      #3
      3 mbps is close to 4 times as much as 250 GB assuming you're using the full 3 mbps.

      Comment

      • Sly
        Let's do some business!
        • Sep 2004
        • 31377

        #4
        Since nobody outright said it, 3mbps is roughly 900-950GB. Thats your difference.
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        • stickyfingerz
          Doin fine
          • Oct 2005
          • 24984

          #5
          Originally posted by Sly
          Since nobody outright said it, 3mbps is roughly 900-950GB. Thats your difference.
          I just didnt do the math for him, I figured he could take 320 * 3 easy enough.

          Comment

          • chaze
            Confirmed User
            • Aug 2002
            • 9774

            #6
            This might help:

            http://www.dwhs.com/bandwidth.htm

            To determine how much bandwidth you will need, you must first estimate how big each page on your site is, and how many people are going to view it.
            To do this, add up the size of every image on the page and the size of the page's HTML files. Then multiply this figure by the number of views you expect for that page per month.

            For example, if you had three 10k images on your page and a 2k HTML file, you would have 32k of data on that page. Multiply that by your expected page views (let's say 100,000 per month), and you get 3.2G of data to be transferred that month for that page.

            Now recalculate this number for each page, and you will know approximately how much bandwidth your entire site requires.


            How can I save bandwidth?

            There are two key ways to optimize your bandwidth usage:

            1. Keep your pages as small as possible.
            This means tight HTML programming to reduce file size, and compacting your pictures and graphics to reduce image size.

            2. Secure your website.
            This is too detailed for one paragraph, but a great article is located here when your ready.

            Policing bandwidth

            The most basic method of preventing theft of your bandwidth is policing. Analyze search engines, logs, and other sites to find out who?s using your images (and your bandwidth) without permission.

            Once you've identified the offenders, you can contact them and order them to stop linking to your site (and if they try to feed you a story about everything on the Internet being in the "public domain," don't buy it). Unfortunately, policing sites yourself is a time-consuming task.
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