This download time calculator will help you determine the time it will take to download a file at a given internet bandwidth. An internet bandwidth provides information about a network's upload and download speed, and the faster the internet download speed is, the faster we obtain the file or the data we need. Keep on reading to learn how long it takes to download, let's say, your favorite video clip.
As shown in the chart above, we can express a thousand bytes as one kilobyte, 1000 kilobytes as one megabyte, and so on, just like in SI units. However, for a very long time, this conversion does not hold. Since data usage measurement follows the binary system, which uses powers of 2, a kilobyte used to be equivalent to 210 bytes or 1,024 bytes. On the other hand, a megabyte is equal to 1,024 kilobytes, and so on. Nowadays, we commonly use 1,000 (or the SI conversion) instead of 1,024 (binary conversion) to convert these units. However, new prefixes have been developed for binary conversion in case we need to use them. These prefixes are shown in the table below.
As shown above, the 400 MB video file will finish downloading in less than 11 minutes over a stable 5 Mbps connection. However, if somebody else in the house uses the internet while you're downloading this video file, it could take much longer to complete the download because of congestion in the data transfer. You may check the amount of data required with our video file size calculator.
In this guide, you can use our download time calculator to get an estimate of how long a transfer will take. You can also learn more about downloading, uploading and improving your Wi-Fi speed for a faster download time.
I had this problem too, but there is hope. I started backing up my almost full 128gb iphone 6 to icloud for the first time. The time remaining kept increasing (for 3 days) to eventually say "2 days remaining". It stayed at this point for another 3 days but the progress bar kept moving along. It was unacceptably slow but after a full 7 days of backing up it did eventually work. I just wanted to get this out there incase anyone else was in my position. I kept searching the web for anyone who posted the outcome after having their phone giving them these huge wait times, but there was nothing out there. So here you go. To anyone that cannot find another faster wifi source, and cant afford to lose all their precious data, the back up does eventually work!! and the restore process is ALOT faster, only took about an hour to get the phone functioning. (Still takes more time to fully upload all photos and data, most was done overnight.)
If your backup is taking this long I personally suggest you either take it to an Apple Store of try let it do the backup without any disruptions and if it doesn't complete with-in 6 days try resetting your phone fully and then setting up again and try doing backup.
I had this problem too - my first backup on a new iPhone (upgraded from 6S to X). For almost three weeks, it's been getting stuck about half way through the backup that it would try completing over night. On the old 6S, it would complete every third or fourth night, but just wouldn't on the X - the phone was the only thing that had changed. Turned out that for the first backup on the NEW phone, my connection was too slow (admittedly, being in Australia and our terrible internet, I get only between 7 and 11 Mbps and that's considered excellent for ADSL connections. Took it to work where 80 Mbps is a super slow day and the backup was done in minutes. Subsequent backups at home take longer - an hour or two, but they complete without getting stuck, at least.
That is not normal at all. It can take a few hours if it is your very first backup, you haven't backed up in months, or you have an extraordinarily large amount of content to backup. Two days is way too long.
It will take some time for scanning zipped/compressed files as it uses different different Decompressor engine the extract them and scan them..So if you've lot of compressed files it will take a long time.
I've installed barman on a dedicated server to backup all my postgresql servers. One of the server is now using 100Gb space and the instruction barman backup myserver takes 23 hours. I find it too long, but I have no reference points. Is it common? What should I investigate to improve such situation? Here are the settings for streaming the server
But I think its good to give back 1.5 as long as you have the bandwidth and it doesnt kill your network. Some torrent sites actually have it as a requirement that you do at least 1.0 otherwise they kick you off the site. These keeps people from leeching
Also, to your question about how long seeding should take, it actually varies between different torrents. There is no truly definite time that every seeding torrent must follow. So... just wait till the ratio's 1.5 and I think that'll be it. As debigG rightfully says, it is good to give back to the community! And, if I'm not wrong, the download speed will increase too! Technorabbit :-)
Im also new to the entire scene, but its been downloading overnight and i dont know how long it been downloading but it says seeding 0 of 369(170 in swarm) and peers 15 of 160 (50 in sawrm) i have no idea what this means or how long its going to take.
After pressing the "Estimate duration & ETA" button you will see how long it will take for the file to download or upload, as well as the download ETA in your local time. All estimations assume that the given internet speed is maintained throughout the whole download or upload process, at least on average.
Let us consider an example of a large game or archive image file with a size of 200GB. How long will it take to download over a 100 mbps connection? We can convert 100 mbps to GB/s (it is 11.92 MB/s), or convert 200GB to megabits, then divide the size by the bandwidth. If this is GB as in classic Gigabytes and not SI gigabytes, then that will be 287 minutes or 4 hours and 46 minutes.
Generally speaking, after the initial backup, it won't take long to use Time Machine on Mac to backup because it only has to deal with the files or documents recently created or edited. However, some users report that the Time Machine backup takes too long. That's where this article comes in! Here, we offer you multiple ways to help you speed up Time Machine backup and make it smoother. Read on for more!
Is this your first time backing up your iPhone and you're shocked by the "10 hr" progress bar? The first backup can absolutely take the longest time, but there are also ways that you can speed up that process. This wikiHow article discusses how long an iPhone backup can take, why, and how to make it faster.
As noted earlier, mongodump is not the most efficient or scalable backup approach to use, as it requires all data to be read and dumped via the mongod process. A mongorestore has to recreate all data files and rebuild indexes, so will also take longer to restore than a backup approach such as filesystem snapshots.
In the naive case, when we just care about getting a maximum fare for the service provided, the best regions to pick up passengers from are the NYC airports, and along the main avenues such as the Van Wyck Expressway, and the Long Island Expressway. When we take the distance travelled into account, we get a slightly different picture. The Van Wyck Expressway, and the Long Island Expressway avenues, as well as the airports are still a good place for picking up passengers, but they are a lot less prominent on the map. However, some bright new hotspots appear on the west side of the Hudson river that seem quite profitable.
How long should your backup take? Well, how much money do you have? Slow backups are the Achilles heel of many otherwise very solid backups services. We mentioned Carbonite and IDrive as two examples, but the issue is much broader than that. Be sure to read IDrive backup failure article in case you encounter other issues other than the speed with this service.
The answer is quite simple, it's your connection. You were probably thrilled at first with your broadband connection. You could download files and movies in a few minutes, larger files take longer but it's no big deal because you can still watch streaming movies, listen to music, view sporting events, and it all seems plenty fast enough.
Light travels at 300,000 km per second. So, if our connection were perfect, we could see a a 1.8 ms ping time (362/200,000). Obviously, it isn't a perfect connection, and it takes quite a bit longer (but 38 ms isn't terrible).
Thus, latency is going to affect the overall speed of your connection. High latency simply means that it will take longer for a packet of data to make a round trip from your computer to the remote server and then return to you. Unfortunately, there's not too much you an really do about latency, and it can make even fast connections feel slow.
I have a 500GB external drive full of data. I need to use this drive so, since I have 1TB of storage in OneDrive, I want to upload the content to free up the drive. I have a quite good connection too, so I figured it wouldn't take too long. The thing is that how do I upload large files to OneDrive efficiently?
Running ELK stack 7.13.2
Reindexing is a slow process it takes one day or more than one day.
we have 10 indices of 101.4gb reindexing this size of data is costlier even though we close the logstash but nothing happened and if we reindex one index of 100gb then we have another index of same size we can't do because we think elasticsearch can crash
If we have 20 indices then the day it will take 20 days to reindex because we reindex one by one
one more point that in logstash we are using different pipeline id so if we are reindexing one pipeline id's index then we close that and other pipeline_id is running
No, we activate the WiFi device for you! We aim to activate your WiFi device within 2 business days of it being shipped to your address in Japan. Sometimes, around Japanese holidays, activations can take longer than 2 business days, but we will email you to let you know as soon as the service is active and ready to use.
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