State Broadband Speeds Compared - Who knew that Delaware was a broadband juggernaut?Who knew that Delaware was a broadband juggernaut? 10:53AM Thursday May 29 2008 by Karl Bode tags: business · bandwidth · stats Akamai today released their first ever "State of the Internet Report," which covers a number of topics including broadband penetration, broadband speeds, security, and more. Of particular note to me was their measurement of speed, with the report examining not only the fastest countries, but the fastest States. According to Akamai, they consider anything 2Mbps or greater to be "broadband," with anything 5Mbps or greater to be "high broadband." More interesting perhaps is Akamai's rankings of the fastest (and slowest) U.S. States. According to Akamai, Delaware is the fastest state in the union, with 60% of users hitting the Akamai network at speeds greater than 5Mbps. Rhode Island, New York, Nevada and Oklahoma round out the top five. The report also ranks the slowest states, with Washington State getting the dubious honor as the state with the most connections at 256kbps or lower (21%). Virginia, Washington DC, Georgia and Illinois round out the top (or should I say bottom) five. Washington State actually saw a 151% spike in narrowband use, with Akamai unable to explain why. There's plenty of additional information in the report (pdf) worth digging through (particularly for those interested in security), which I'll do further once I'm done packing up my things for the move to Delaware.
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This report will include data gathered across Akamais global server network about attack traffic and broadband adoption