By way of background interest (slightly O/T), some technical info on the requirements and bandwidth demands for streaming video.
This is a summary of the official statements from Netflix on
downlink speed requirements and
data usage :
View attachment 169807
By way of a real-world, SA-relative illustration : the graph below shows downlink bandwidth usage on my own connection (not BitCo - yet!), over a period of about 10 minutes while watching a Netflix movie in "semi-HD" - this would be at 720p resolution, I believe :
View attachment 169811
With Netflix in particular it can be hard to know what quality you're actually getting, because they use an
adaptive transmission scheme (Silverlight) : the more bandwidth you have, the better the quality you see.
The graph above was measured on an internet connection with well over 10Mbps downlink capability. You can see that even with a 720p movie, an average of nearly 3.3Mbps (with peaks of up to 8Mbps) can be demanded,
if the bandwidth is available.
For those interested in more technical details,
this article gives quite a nice overview of typical bandwidth requirements for streaming, using the contemporary H.264 video codec and with specific reference to online streaming services like Netflix and Hulu.