Contention Ratio.
Lets use a 512k ADSL system for instance.
Basically the ideal Contention Ratio for any connection would be 1:1 or expressed as 512:1
This means that the Service Provider can guarentee you a 512k connection 24/7/365 but it would cost you a fortune, probably in the region of R27000 pm.
So ISP's utilize varing Contention Ratios with the average being 50:1 or expressed as 512:50 which is still excellent.
This means in ADSL terms, the DSLAM you are connected to at the exchange you will share with 50 other users.
Now if all 50 users are all downloading at the same time your download speed theoretically will drop to 512/50 = 10.24 kbits (1.28 KB/sec)
Now because the way data is transmitted on the Internet this is highly unlikely to happen.
For instance, Telkoms ADSL has a Contention Ratio of 512:40 (stand to correction here) which means the DSLAM you are connected to at the exchange holds 40 connections.
Now how many people in high density areas have ever had their ADSL drop to 1KB/sec as 40 connections there is easy to achieve.
Now although a 512:40 looks good and is according to world standards, they go and destroy that by adding a Cap - so at the end of the day you would have been better off with a 512:200 system for instance.
ISDN is in the region of 128:200 - has anyone ever complained there ?
This is where software monitors who are hoggers and who is not and spread things around a bit to even the playing field so to speak.
Basically at the end of the day, the higher the Contention Ration the cheaper the ISP can offer the system.
Why everyone is suddenly worring about Contention Ratio I dont know because at the end of the day all you want is a good and reliable connection, with good pings and decent downloads.
ISP's spend 1000's of Rands on Software to take care of this.
Some information I found and links to follow:
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote">If the server has a 100kb connection to the net, and there is a connection of 1:1000 - and ALL 1000 sites have a page of 1kb on them, and 1000 different people from 1000 different ISP's all access a site at the exact same time, then 100% of the server bandwidth will be used.
If, however, 2000 people from 2000 different ISP's all access a site at the exact same time, then 200% of the bandwidth is used (which cant happen), so half the people are "given" the file, and then the other half are "given" the file.<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote">This describes the maximum number of users sharing the bandwidth on the connection between your local exchange and the Internet Service Provider.. A customer with a contention ratio of 20:1 never has to share this bandwidth with more than 19 other users<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote">Contention ratio is the term used to describe the situation whereby customers share capacity on a line or within a network. For example if everyone in Cork phoned someone in Dublin at the same time, not all calls would get through because there is only a limited number of circuits between Cork and Dublin. But the chances of this happening is extremely remote so the contention ratio used has little effect on the service to the customer. However if the number of circuits was further reduced people would begin to notice a reduction in the quality of service (i.e. more busy tones when they try to ring Dublin) so the balance is whats important here.
For IP traffic a contention ratio is even less of an issue (provided the ratio is not extemely high) because, unlike voice telephony, Internet traffic is 'bursty' in nature: when a customer is connected to the Internet they do not use 512kbps at all times. Browsing the web may only use a part of this bandwidth for a number of seconds then none at all until the customer loads the next page.
The 'contention ratio' is the ratio of bandwidth sold to bandwidth provided on the backbone: in eircom's case the contention ratio is 24:1 (48:1 on "starter"), meaning that for every 24 1Mbps connections sold, 1Mbps in total is provided on the backbone for them to share. 48 customers would share 2Mbps and so on. This is about the usual contention ratio for business-class DSL services worldwide .
We do not give any guarantees to customers on contended links, however the chances of them experiencing poor service on our services are low. Remember i-stream is a best effort service and should be sold as such. Remember also that this service connects them to the internet!!!. If congestion is experienced on i-stream the chances are that they have hit a slow connection some where on the internet.<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote">In real terms, If you are connected to a 1 MB connection with a 20:1 contention ration, this means that 1MB is provided for a group of 20 users. However, the contention ratio does not apply to one single group of users in the same area. So for 1000 users, 100MB would be available, shared between all 1000 users. Therefore the contention ratio will only affect your connection if all 1000 users on your exchange are online and saturating their downstream link. This is incredibly unlikely due to the sporadic nature of Internet traffic.
Normal Dial up connections are `negotiated' rather than contended. This means that once the maximum number of users are connected at one time, no other users can connect. This is when you would hear an engaged tone. A Contended service means that this never happens, the bandwidth simply redistributes itself depending on how many users are connected.<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"></font id="quote">
http://www.idnet.net.uk/broadband/contentionratio.html
http://www.getonlinebroadband.com/faqs/faq02.html
http://www.getonlinebroadband.com/faqs/faq29.html