It refers to the portion of the network that is currently being used by your task manager application.
It refers to the portion of the network that is currently being used by your task manager application.
Hi, I looked at my task manager to check RAM usage and found my network speed is about 80MBPS while running tasks and downloading. It shows a percentage in the network section. I’m curious what it means—am I seeing the actual speed limit or something else? Could it be related to the type of Wi-Fi (2.4GHz vs 5GHz) or the card’s maximum capacity? Or is it just the overall max speed it can handle? I don’t want to get confused by the new naming conventions. Thanks!
I verified it using a 5GHz connection on an AC adapter, and it appears to reflect the link speed percentage. The Wi-Fi card's speed varies depending on the connection type, such as AC. I’m not sure if multistream is involved.
The link speed shows its capability based on the available streams. However, the percentage isn't very helpful unless you're using a wired Ethernet connection where you can reach those speeds.
It explains how the system now computes things. Previously, frequent Wi-Fi interruptions required adjustments to work around them. Now, upgrading to a stronger internet connection will help when I’m sure about the present setup. Switching the Wi-Fi name at the router also seemed effective, likely due to reduced network load.