Packet Loss and Broadband Performance

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In a recent article, Joe Madden wrote an article looking at the various wireless technologies he has used at his home in rural central California. Over time he subscribed to a fixed wireless network using Wi-Fi spectrum, cellular LTE broadband, Starlink, and a fixed wireless provider using CBRS spectrum. Madden was able to analyze his broadband performance in ways that are not easily understood by the average subscriber. He came to an interesting conclusion – the difference in performance between various broadband technologies has less to do with speed than with the consistency of the broadband signal. The average speed tests on the various products varied from 10/2 Mbps on fixed wireless using Wi-Fi, to 117/13 Mbps on Starlink. But what Madden found was that there was a huge difference in consistency as measured by packet loss. Fixed wireless on Wi-Fi had packet loss of 8.5%, while the packet loss on fixed wireless using CBRS spectrum dropped to 0.1%. The difference is stark and is due to the interference that affects using an unlicensed spectrum compared to a cleaner signal on a licensed spectrum. The winner of the packet loss comparison is fiber, which typically has an incredibly low packet loss and also a quick recovery rate for lost packets. The bottom line from the article is that speed isn’t everything. It’s just one of the characteristics that define a good broadband connection, but we’ve unfortunately locked onto speed as the only important characteristic.


Packet Loss and Broadband Performance