QUOTE(cannavaro @ Apr 19 2010, 05:03 PM)
You happen to be the network engineer who works for P1?
Coz when mine was installed the TM guys were telling me about a certain P1 guy in living in Taman Tun who posted photos of his installation on LYN... and AFAIK at that time there's only you and that guy in the other thread.

Lol no

I had two very friendly engineers install the Unifi for me.. apparently I was the first in my area near KDU Blitzone there. Prolly that other guy.
QUOTE(Demonic Wrath @ Apr 19 2010, 05:32 PM)
Speedtest result is based on 1 connection. For downloads, most probably users will use download managers to download with more than 1 connection. That's why can get full speed. So, in other words,
Speedtest is accurate, but not accurate on practical usage.
Anyway, for those who're living in Kota Kemuning, Shah Alam (postcode 40460), UniFi will be available after July 2010. But the weird thing is, within 50cm from my house, there's a UniFi green box.
Speedtest is not accurate if that 1 connection cannot max out the line

Using my own Jaring based servers, 1 thread can get 20mbps using the HTTP and SSH-FTP protocol. Tells me the servers being used to host the speedtest file have some capacity issues. After all, how many Malaysian datacenters offer gigabit ports in Malaysia? 5x 20mbps users and the 10/100mbps uplink will be saturated. It gives people the false impression that they're not getting what they're paying for.. so at least for Unifi, speedtest.net is not accurate to gauge the line capacity.