It means that you probably have a 10/10 (up down) internet connection. You are 
getting the bandwidth reported, which is theoretically what is currently left 
after everything else currently sending and receiving on that link. If you 
don't have anything being served up, I'd be concerned about your up speed. 

Most residential internet services have in the contract that you will not use 
the connection for business purposes (at least in the US). That is why most 
residential services are asynchronous (not the same up speed as down speed). If 
you are not serving anything up to the internet, you don't need very much up 
bandwidth, and if you are not running a business, you shouldn't really be 
services anything up. 

HTH
Bob S


> On Apr 5, 2018, at 12:49 , Richmond Mathewson via use-livecode 
> <use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:
> 
> Over 'here' in "naughty" Bulgaria where I have the cheapest internet package 
> available
> I found that LC 9.0 for Linux took 3 minutes to download . . . and that was 
> absolutely fine.
> 
> Ookla says that my download rate is 10.78 Mbps and my upload rate is 6.28 
> Mbps,
> which is super because I don't understand what those magic numbers mean.
> 
> Richmond.


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