Soldato
- Joined
- 13 Feb 2004
- Posts
- 2,656
- Location
- South Shields
Hello OCUK!
I’m hoping you can settle an ongoing dispute at my workplace regarding the effect of multiple browser tabs on network performance.
I will attempt to keep this vague and unbiased.
The office setup is as follows:
3 PCs:
Managing Director has an Intel Pentium Dual core with 4GB of RAM, they are connected to the network via WIFI.
Person A has an Intel Core I3 with 8GB of RAM, they are connected to the network via Ethernet.
Person B has an Intel processor (unsure of which) and an unknown amount of RAM (I’d assume a minimum of 4GB), the are connected to the network via a power line adapter roughly 4m from the router.
The router is an ASUS RT-AC68U AC1900.
The broadband connection, if you can call it that, operates between 1 and 2mb.
Here is the situation:
Person A is sitting at their desk, during the length of the day (say a 6 hour window) they have opened 15 tabs on their browser of choice, the websites they have open are not websites such as YouTube or Netflix but websites such as suppliers like RS components or perhaps Amazon or Reddit. They are currently working within outlook on an email or perhaps using word to formulate a letter.
Person B enters the office of Person A to close Person A’s internet browser (Microsoft Edge) as they state having 15 tabs open is negatively affecting the network performance within the office environment.
Person A states that this cannot be the case due to the way the browser downloads the data into locally stored cache and that the issue is down to the broadband speed.
Person B states having so many browser tabs open absolutely does affect network performance.
This has been an ongoing topic of discussion in our workplace for a few years, even when we had an 8mb line at our old premises.
Who is right and who is wrong?
I’m hoping you can settle an ongoing dispute at my workplace regarding the effect of multiple browser tabs on network performance.
I will attempt to keep this vague and unbiased.
The office setup is as follows:
3 PCs:
Managing Director has an Intel Pentium Dual core with 4GB of RAM, they are connected to the network via WIFI.
Person A has an Intel Core I3 with 8GB of RAM, they are connected to the network via Ethernet.
Person B has an Intel processor (unsure of which) and an unknown amount of RAM (I’d assume a minimum of 4GB), the are connected to the network via a power line adapter roughly 4m from the router.
The router is an ASUS RT-AC68U AC1900.
The broadband connection, if you can call it that, operates between 1 and 2mb.
Here is the situation:
Person A is sitting at their desk, during the length of the day (say a 6 hour window) they have opened 15 tabs on their browser of choice, the websites they have open are not websites such as YouTube or Netflix but websites such as suppliers like RS components or perhaps Amazon or Reddit. They are currently working within outlook on an email or perhaps using word to formulate a letter.
Person B enters the office of Person A to close Person A’s internet browser (Microsoft Edge) as they state having 15 tabs open is negatively affecting the network performance within the office environment.
Person A states that this cannot be the case due to the way the browser downloads the data into locally stored cache and that the issue is down to the broadband speed.
Person B states having so many browser tabs open absolutely does affect network performance.
This has been an ongoing topic of discussion in our workplace for a few years, even when we had an 8mb line at our old premises.
Who is right and who is wrong?