effective bandwidth
Bandwidth is the measure of range or band of frequencies that a channel or path can handle at a maximum rate. whereas, throughput is the average rate of successful message delivery over a communication channel. and Goodput is simply the changing in throughput rate.
Outbound throughput simply describes the data bandwidth that a network device can send using. Kinda like a sustained upload speed.
People often confuse bandwidth and throughput. 802.11a and 802.11g are the two common standards that have a maximum bandwidth of 54Mbps. The actual maximum throughput you will see on a 54Mbps link will be 20-25Mbps.
bandwidth
Firewire 800 has twice the bandwidth of the Firewire 400.The number is the throughput in Megabits.
D. 802.11n boasts a mximum throughput of 600 mbps.
a static ip does not have any effect on throughput it simply mean your ip address will not change
A trunk port is a port on a switch that can be assigned to carry multiple VLANs across switches or increase overall bandwidth/throughput.
Throughput in megabits per second will always be equal to or less than the bandwidth in megabits per second (it can't be higher). Throughput decreases as latency increases. For instance if you send a file to your neighbor two houses down the latency should be very low (assuming you are on the same network). However, if you send it to another city the latency will be higher and while your bandwidth remains the same, your throughput will decrease due to the latency between the locations. Note that this can be improved by optimizing the TCP window size on your computers. There is a free TCP optimizer program available on the web if you search on that term.
TCP-IP is a protocol, not a transmission medium. Bandwidth doesn't affect it.
This can known as bandwidth or throughput, and the two most common measurements are kilobits and megabits per second.