No one's complaining because no one who had a problem bothered to stay. It's one of those things that catches new streamers a ton of the time. The only people who will stay are the ones who CAN watch without issues. They'll just silently leave and try the next channel on the list. A new viewer who has problems isn't going to say one damn word. That the areas without bullet holes were the ones that needed more armor. The areas with NO bullet holes were the planes that didn't survive being shot. Until someone pointed out that those were the planes that made it back. They looked at a diagram showing everywhere that returning planes had bullet holes, and decided they were going to put extra armor there. In WW2, the RAF were studying planes coming back to determine where to add extra armor. Streaming at 6mbps as a non-Partner is absolutely shooting yourself in the foot bad enough to take off the whole leg.Īre you familiar with 'survivorship bias'? When you're dealing with a tiny area like that (hell, California alone is almost double the size, and a lot longer!) it's going to be a hell of a lot easier to deploy network infrastructure, compared to a landmass that takes literally two days of nonstop driving with no rest/food/potty/sleep/fuel stops. The entire UK is around the size of Colorado. If not just standalone properties dotted through the countryside. Anything above a village or town would be hard to consider 'rural', and we have a bunch of places where it's at-best a handful of houses. It also does not pay attention to the large segment of viewers on mobile, who have highly unstable connections which will have even more problems with playback.Īlso, that article is talking about rural cities, which is a contradiction in terms. That article also does not take into account the quality and speed of connections to the Twitch servers, connection stability, or minimum constant throughput. Thanks to /u/iTruthful and Conceptional for the art! Clip Contest: November 4th - 18th AMA: Previously: Certified Ergonomic Specialist and an Occupational Therapist
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