Which state has the fastest broadband Internet?

Thu Aug 27, 2009 11:40AM EDT

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Earlier this week much fuss was made about how U.S. broadband speeds continue to languish compared to our more sophisticated international rivals: We now rank a lowly 28th worldwide, our average 5.07Mbps net connection far below the 20.4Mbps average that world leader South Korea boasts.

But that 5Mbps is just an average, and rates vary widely from state to state. And in fact, Speed Matters, the site from the Communication Workers of America that popularized the research, broke the data down on a state-by-state basis.

What state is on top? If you said Delaware, well, you've probably already seen this report publicized somewhere else. The home of Baltimore and the Wilmington City Ruff Rollers roller derby team has the best average download speeds in the nation, with a 9.91Mbps average throughput; that's faster than the #13 country on the international list, Germany.

Rhode Island, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and New York round out the top five.

At the bottom of the list come the states and territories you'd expect to suffer from low speed due to their remote location, large size, and/or sparse population. Puerto Rico averages just a 1.04Mbps download speed, with the Virgin Islands, Montana, Alaska, and Idaho all reporting well below a 3Mbps average.

Of course the CWA's goal with this report, now in its third year, isn't entirely altruistic -- these guys aren't really worried about how long you have to wait before that kitty cat video fully loads in your browser. The CWA naturally wants to spur broadband upgrades, infrastructure improvements, and better availability throughout the country, because that means more work for its membership. Can't really blame them, of course, and the $7.2 billion in Obama's stimulus package that targets broadband deployment must be looking awfully enticing, too.

Check out how your state ranks by exploring the interactive map here.

Comments on Which state has the fastest broadband Internet?

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  • 1 Posted by macksumum1 on Thu Aug 27, 2009 12:14PM EDT Report Abuse

    it all comes down to money,if a company can make more money by offering slower internet speeds then you will allways see slower internet speeds.in america most people are very happy with their broadband speeds and see no reason why their broadband speeds should be faster for the price that their paying.

  • 2 Posted by jirojas on Thu Aug 27, 2009 12:50PM EDT Report Abuse

    Capitalism doing its thing #1.

  • 3 Posted by big10fanatic on Thu Aug 27, 2009 1:04PM EDT Report Abuse

    Uh Delaware isn't the home of Baltimore. Baltimore is in Maryland.

  • 4 Posted by rujjing on Thu Aug 27, 2009 4:21PM EDT Report Abuse

    Thank you @big10fanatic. Baltimore is in Maryland! Jez! Take a class!

  • 5 Posted by bella77427 on Thu Aug 27, 2009 6:04PM EDT Report Abuse

    Delaware uh...guessing off the top of my head I would have thought New York. Do I ever remember those old dial-up days when a simple pic (stills) would take forever to download. Then as if thats not enough it stops about halfway and I would get up do some chores and return to find it 75% on the way to being completed.

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