Austin Tops San Francisco In Study Of Fastest Download Speeds
Pando Networks is releasing new data today about American broadband speeds, taken from over 10 million downloads facilitated by the company’s consumer-facing software throughout the course of 2011. The study’s goal was to discover which cities in the U.S. had the fastest average download speeds, and not surprisingly, major tech hotspots like San Francisco, Austin, Seattle and New York all led the pack.
But topping the list? Not San Francisco. Instead, the honors go to Austin, which saw speeds of 841 KBps, Pando found.
Pando has good reason to track metrics like this, as it provides software to both consumers and businesses that enable downloads of large files. Game companies contract with Pando to have their games distributed using Pando’s software, which then measures the speed of the download as the data is delivered to end-users.
The client runs in the background on users’ computers, and while its use case biases the study a little bit towards a certain type of computer user, the large sample size still makes it possible to paint a decent picture of comparative speeds in the states and cities the study analyzed.
Among the largest cities in the U.S., (those with populations greater than 500,000), the fastest speeds were recorded primarily in tech hotspots, with Austin, as noted above, arriving in first place. Following that were San Francisco (828 KBps), Boston (827 KBps), Seattle (805 KBps), and New York (787 KBps).
Meanwhile, El Paso, Texas had the slowest speed, at 483 KBps – or, about half that of Austin. Other pokey towns included Fort Worth (517 KBps), Oklahoma City (518 KBps), Albuquerque (537 KBps) and Denver (550 KBps).
In terms of regions, the densely populated Northeast and mid-Atlantic fared well, while more rural areas suffered. The fastest state was Rhode Island, with an average speed of 963 KBps, which topped Delaware’s 923 KBps and New Jersey’s 897 KBps.
Idaho was the slowest state, averaging 387 KBps, followed by Oklahoma (443 KBps) and Montana (452 KBps). South Dakota, however, surprised with a speed of 712 KBps, topping both Florida and Illinois.
The study also rated ISPs, finding Comcast delivered the highest average download speeds (941 KBps), followed by Optimum Online at 874KBps, Charter Communications at 868KBps, Cox at 800KBps, Verizon at 799KBps and Time Warner’s Road Runner at 737KBps.
The full list of top cities (those with populations over 500,000) is below. Speeds are KBps:
- Austin 841
- San Francisco 828
- Boston 827
- Seattle 805
- New York 787
- Baltimore 781
- Washington DC 750
- Philadelphia 723
- Louisville 701
- Chicago 692
- Los Angeles 665
- San Jose 661
- Indianapolis 657
- Milwaukee 635
- Fresno 633
- Portland 630
- Sacramento 629
- Tucson 625
- Nashville 624
- San Diego 612
- Dallas 604
- Jacksonville 600
- Columbus 595
- Las Vegas 592
- Phoenix 581
- Memphis 581
- Houston 579
- Detroit 565
- Charlotte 560
- San Antonio 555
- Denver 550
- Albuquerque 537
- OK City 518
- Fort Worth 517
- El Paso 483