smileyhead@discuss.tchncs.de to Selfhosted@lemmy.worldEnglish · 5 months agoHow much uplink Internet speed needed for flawless remote Jellyfin watching (2-3 people at the same time, no 4K).message-squaremessage-square5fedilinkarrow-up12arrow-down10
arrow-up12arrow-down1message-squareHow much uplink Internet speed needed for flawless remote Jellyfin watching (2-3 people at the same time, no 4K).smileyhead@discuss.tchncs.de to Selfhosted@lemmy.worldEnglish · 5 months agomessage-square5fedilink
minus-squareDiabolo96@lemmy.dbzer0.comlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up0·edit-25 months agoI don’t have a jellyfin server but 1MB/s (8mbps) for each person watching 1080p (3.6Gb per hour of content for each file) seems reasonable. ~3MB/s (24mbps) upload and as much download should work.
minus-squaredysprosium@lemmy.dbzer0.comlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up0·5 months agoWhy don’t people use Mb/s and MB/s which makes it so much clearer what you’re talking about
minus-squarelud@lemm.eelinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·5 months agoThe best format imo is MB/s and Mbit/s It avoids all confusion.
minus-squareSigHunter@lemmy.kde.sociallinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·edit-24 months agoBack in the day, the rule was mbit (megabit) for data in transfer (network speed) and MB (megabyte) for data at rest, like on HDDs
I don’t have a jellyfin server but 1MB/s (8mbps) for each person watching 1080p (3.6Gb per hour of content for each file) seems reasonable. ~3MB/s (24mbps) upload and as much download should work.
Why don’t people use Mb/s and MB/s which makes it so much clearer what you’re talking about
The best format imo is MB/s and Mbit/s
It avoids all confusion.
Back in the day, the rule was mbit (megabit) for data in transfer (network speed) and MB (megabyte) for data at rest, like on HDDs