Before today, it is always considered that the 2M bandwidth download speed should be 2m/s, but this is not true. The following is an example of the 1M bandwidth to explain the relationship between the bandwidth and download speed that you just understood.
Bandwidth is the "highest data rate" that can be passed from one point in a network to another.
1M==1MB? The answer is not equal to.
The following explains 1M:
The emphasis is on byte-to-bit relationship differentiation. The unit of data in the computer is the capacity of the storage device is byte (bytes, hard disk, memory, storage card, etc. capacity units) and data transmission people habitually use bit (bit, broadband transmission speed: including wired broadband and wireless broadband) this unit.
1byte=8bit, meaning 1 bytes occupies 8 bits.
because: bit abbreviation is lowercase b, so 1m/s (speed unit, followed by second, abbreviation s) =1mbit/s abbreviated to 1M/S=1MB/S=1024KBIT/S=128KBYTE/S (this step is based on 1byte=8bit) =128kb/ S (according to byte abbreviation B)
Therefore, the download speed of 1M bandwidth should be the theory of 128k/s.
The relationship between bandwidth and download rate