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July 26, 2007 5:20 PM PDT

Swedish senior scores super-speedy Internet

by Sabena Suri

Sigbritt Lothberg is a 75-year-old woman from Sweden who recently got a computer. Lothberg, however, has Internet capabilities the average user couldn't even dream of: she has what is believed to be the fastest residential connection on the planet.

The woman's speedy fiber optic connection--40 gigabits per second--was set up by her son Peter, a network expert, with help from the head of the Karlstad city network unit, Hafsteinn Jonsson, according to the Associated Press. Jonsson's rationale? "We wanted to show that that there are no limitations to Internet speed," Jonsson said.

Although Lothberg could potentially do things like download thousands of movies a day with her speedy connection (the connection allows movies to be downloaded in fewer than two seconds), her interests lie in the simple, oft-overlooked pleasures: reading publications available online. She'll just take her daily dose of The New York Times online edition, thank you.

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40 gigabytes per second <--- ?
by genotypewriter August 2, 2007 7:33 PM PDT
I'm quite sure they meant 40 gigabits per second... The tech experts at CNET can't even tell the difference here. If you're reading this and if you don't know the difference, then go and learn.

Also, if you type "memtest86" in Google Images and look at the images of the blue screens, you'll see that 40 gigabytes per second is like twice as fast L1 cache on most P4 systems.

But I guess none of these make sense for the people who can't tell the difference between gigabytes and gigabits.

And why is this in the laptops section on Crave?

CNET's incompetence is shining again...
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