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Thread ID: 62713 2005-10-17 01:34:00 ...estimated download time mark c (247) Press F1
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396997 2005-10-17 01:34:00 When downloading something the "estimated download time" (I'm on slow dial up) goes up and down like it can't make up its mind. Starts by saying 10 mins, then it's oh no make that 15 and 30 seconds, no 20, alright 18.

I think this is because the speed that packets move varies with the route and traffic. A bit like in a car on the Orcs harbour bridge at 5.00pm and you think "At this rate it's going to take two hours to get home.' And then the traffic loosens up and you think "Oh great be home in half an hour at this rate."

Is this right?

This is how I explain it to my less tech-savvy friends but I really don't know.

Any clarification much appreciatted. :)..........m
mark c (247)
396998 2005-10-17 01:45:00 Well, it depends where you're downloading the file/s from, what country, how busy the traffic is, to and from the site, and how many people are downloading the same file from the same server, and from the same country.

The download speed will fluctuate. I wouldnt expect to get files in a hurry.

The bigger the file, obviously the longer it'll take.
Speedy Gonzales (78)
396999 2005-10-17 01:52:00 You've got it in a nut shell Rob99 (151)
397000 2005-10-17 02:08:00 Excellentissimo. Thank you both. Issue over. :D mark c (247)
397001 2005-10-17 03:48:00 Excellentissimo
Is that a proper English word? :confused:

Cheers :)
Renmoo (66)
397002 2005-10-17 04:09:00 No, James. It's a "humorous" fake word, made by taking an English word, and adding the Italian "issimo" suffix. It's a bit like "pig Latin". It's probably originally based on the idea "Foreigners are funny. Italians are foreign. They talk strangely, not like us. So if I make a word sound like an Italian one, that will be funny". All nations are xenophobic. ;) I'm sure Mark doesn't mean it like that. Graham L (2)
397003 2005-10-17 04:45:00 Thank you Graham L, no I don't.

jameskan: I used to live in Spain and spoke Spanish while I was there and the suffix "issimo" is used to express emphasis. Just a language habit I picked up switching back to English.

"Excellent" in Spanish is "sobresaliente', so "excellentissimo" isn't a Spanish word either.
OK?

Was just expressing my thanks :D...........m (non xenophobe)
mark c (247)
397004 2005-10-17 04:54:00 I was thinking of Italian, but I suppose Spanish comes from the same Latin base. "~issimo" is the "diminutive" ending in Italian, I think. Anyway, the way the BBC (www.bbc.co.uk/languages/italian/issimo/index.shtml) uses it seems to confirm that. :D Graham L (2)
397005 2005-10-17 05:12:00 quick lesson in Italian superlatives] (www.geocities.com) mark c (247)
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