If it is assumed that when referring to 8 Mb throughput a speed of 8 Mb/s is being achieved, the answer can be calculated by dividing the size of the file by the download speed. In this case, a 440 Mb file can be downloaded in 55 seconds.
It would take 1 tenth of a minute(1/10)
Approximately 10 hours.
69 minutes
45 Seconds.
Yes but the sad thing is it doesn't work on macs.
If it's a large file or your connection is slow the download time will be longer.
The file is big? = =''
about three hours if the connection is stable
about 60-70 seconds
To download a file you need to double click it then at the bottom of the screen it comes up with a box showing how long it has until it finishes the download and goes into your iTunes or other mediaplayer.
Depending on the speed of your Internet, a 5615 Mb file will take on average 50 minutes to download.
It will depend on your download speed. If you have a 30mb/s download speed it will take 2 seconds. If you have a 512kb/s download speed it will take 2 minutes
Because it is such a big file (Over 2GB)
It depends on your internet speed. The file is around 2GB.
at that constant speed about 3 minutes and 30 seconds
An IIS download can take anywhere from a few minutes to a few hours to download. The reason for the difference is based on how big the file may be as well as how fast your computer is.
No, maximising throughput does not necessarily mean maximising turnaround time. Throughput is a measure of how many operations can be performed in a period of time. Turnaround is a measure of how long it takes to perform an operation. If you optimize latency and/or overhead, you can increase throughput and decrease turnaround time. On the other hand, if you create parallel processing, you can increase throughput without decreasing turnaround.