almost all mediums of internet connections can achieve this speed
DSL cable and fireboptic can all achieve these speeds
Digital Subciber Line
It depends on the provider and the type of connection. It could be dial-up, cable, or DSL. Internet connection speeds are usually measured in Kbps.
Edge is the older slower technology for accessing data over the mobile network. It provides average data speeds between 75-135Kbps. The latest 3G network uses HSDPA/UMTS technology (High Speed Downlink Packet Access/Universal Mobile Telephone System) and provides download speeds of 700 Kbps-1.7 Mbps So, in essence, you are getting something much closer to home broadband speeds over 3G.
56 kbps is ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network), which uses a switched circuit to connect from point to point. 45 Mbps is probably DS3.
150 KBps, like 2x is 300KBps, and 3x is 450 KBps reading speeds
Assuming an ADSL line, typical values would be 2 Mbps download and 128 kbps upload.
KBPS is the speed of download
An OC48 bandwidth connection is 2.488 Gbps which equates to 19,904,000 kbps (kilobits) or 2,488,000 KBps (kilobytes).
Radio Service offers speeds up to 114 Kbps. Enhanced Data Rates up to 384 Kbps. downlink speeds up to 1.92 Mbps. Terrestrial Radio Access is 100 Mbps.
IN theory you are able to get speeds up to 596Mbps but in reality most providers have speeds around up to 25Mbps.Bell or Xplornet internet has 25mbps with data caps. If you have no option for home or cable internet from ISPs from iVC Telecom than you have no choice but to sign up for sattelite internet
On the Cricket Wireless website in the FAQ there is a section that explains there connection speeds. Here is what it says:Download speeds are typically 400-700 kilobits per second (kbps) Upload speeds are typically 100-200 kilobits per second (kbps) Cricket Broadband speeds are about 10 times faster than dial-up; which means you can check email, manage your accounts or watch a video, all at 3G speeds.
The abbreviation "kbps" stands for KiloBytes Per Second. This abbreviation is often used to measure how fast an internet connection is in terms of data download and upload speeds.