I think your challenge now is that you're rowing back hard on this. 25Gbps is now symmetrical 1Gbps. Hmmm. 10Tb download would be solidly downloading for 24 hours on 1Gbps and you couldn't ever upload it at 50Mbps.
We look after a large number of installed customer networks and we back those up where requested (pretty much all of them) and at our office in Salford Quays we got a good deal from Daisy on a 2Gbps leased line but when we actually had to pay for the renewal we never actually used it all so we bought the 1Gbps circuit instead. My home connection is 1Gbps symmetrical FTTP with Upp and it's a business connection because I wanted the supplied block of fixed IP addresses for my kit.
Because our business systems are built on fairly standard hardware they do what standard hardware does and it manages really well on very tight bandwidth. So when you show a system designed to run on 80/20Mbps FTTC a symmetrical 1Gbps connection it just cracks on with it and gets the job done quicker. We buy and test equipment constantly and we have some very fast switching and routing gear but as we're not Facebook or AWS we honestly don't need it. And neither, I strongly suggest, do you.
It very much sounds to me like you have nothing better to do than waste electricity shunting data around pointlessly. Which is your hobby. But seriously dude, it's just you in your army of pointless datashifters. No other home user is moving terabytes of data on a daily basis. It's just you.
On the subject of discrete graphics cards its not the same thing at all, you need a chunky graphics card to render games at high resolutions and high framerates at high quality settings. And they sell tens of thousands of graphics cards annually because gamers use them. They get a benefit of it. Not just huddled in front of a pile of hot copper and silicon rubbing your hands and watching the Tb spin by for the hell of it.
How do you saturate a 10Gbps connection with a 50Mbps upload? I'm genuinely interested.
We look after a large number of installed customer networks and we back those up where requested (pretty much all of them) and at our office in Salford Quays we got a good deal from Daisy on a 2Gbps leased line but when we actually had to pay for the renewal we never actually used it all so we bought the 1Gbps circuit instead. My home connection is 1Gbps symmetrical FTTP with Upp and it's a business connection because I wanted the supplied block of fixed IP addresses for my kit.
Because our business systems are built on fairly standard hardware they do what standard hardware does and it manages really well on very tight bandwidth. So when you show a system designed to run on 80/20Mbps FTTC a symmetrical 1Gbps connection it just cracks on with it and gets the job done quicker. We buy and test equipment constantly and we have some very fast switching and routing gear but as we're not Facebook or AWS we honestly don't need it. And neither, I strongly suggest, do you.
It very much sounds to me like you have nothing better to do than waste electricity shunting data around pointlessly. Which is your hobby. But seriously dude, it's just you in your army of pointless datashifters. No other home user is moving terabytes of data on a daily basis. It's just you.
On the subject of discrete graphics cards its not the same thing at all, you need a chunky graphics card to render games at high resolutions and high framerates at high quality settings. And they sell tens of thousands of graphics cards annually because gamers use them. They get a benefit of it. Not just huddled in front of a pile of hot copper and silicon rubbing your hands and watching the Tb spin by for the hell of it.
I'm saturating 10Gbps boxes on the daily offsite, I simply said it'd be nice to be able to bring that in house.
How do you saturate a 10Gbps connection with a 50Mbps upload? I'm genuinely interested.