I am connecting a 1.8 GHz laptop running XP SP2 through a WiFi coffeshop connection (which is running some kind of NAT system that looks a lot like Wingate) that reports 54Mbps. The other end runs into the host PC via cable modem (Comcast in the Western US) that routinely runs at around 2+ Mbps. The Host PC is a 450 MHz P-II running Win2K SP4 with a 10 base-T wired connection to the cable modem. The host is also connected to two internal 10/100 NICs; one wired and one for wireless. During this test there was no other significant activity on the internal LAN.
I see from 200 to 500 Kbps reported on the Gatekeeper monitor while transferring files in the 500k to 2 mByte range, i.e. up to 25% of what appears to be the slowest part of the chain, the cable modem connection.
Given the nature of the connections, the encrypt/decrypt process on both ends, and the fact that its an older somehwat slow PC, is this what I can expect to see; or is there a throttle point that I'm not aware of that could be addressed for higher speeds?
Thanks,
DJ