covering the week's top tech stories with a slight linux bias a team of university college london engineers have set a new world record internet speed and you won't believe how fast it is they've been able to achieve internet transmission speed a fifth faster than the previous record the the research team led by dr lydia galdino achieved a data transmission rate of 178 terabits a second that's 178 million megabits a second compare that to the 50 megabits you're getting at home at 178 terabits per second it would be possible to download the entire netflix library in less than a second the record which is double the capacity of any system currently in use worldwide was achieved by transmitting data through a much wider range of colors of light or wavelengths than is typically used in optical fiber current infrastructure uses a limited spectrum bandwidth of 4.5 terahertz with 9 terahertz commercial bandwidth systems entering the market whereas the researchers used a bandwidth of 16.8 terahertz to do this researchers combine different amplifier technologies needed to boost the signal power over the wider bandwidth and maximize speed by developing new patterns of signal combinations that make best use of the phase brightness and polarization properties of the light in this way they were able to manipulate the properties of each individual wavelength a huge benefit of the technique is that it can be deployed on already existing infrastructure by simply upgrading the amplifiers that are located on optical fiber routes at 40 to 100 kilometer intervals it would be shockingly cheap to perform such an upgrade upgrading an amplifier would cost around 21 000 or about 420 dollars per kilometer if we upgraded every 50 kilometers compare that to installing new optical fibers which can in urban areas cost up to three-fourths of a million dollars per kilometer lead author dr galdener dino a lecturer at ucl and a royal academy of engineering research fellow said while current state-of-the-art cloud data center interconnections are capable of transporting up to 35 terabits a second we are working with new technologies that utilize more efficiently the existing infrastructure making better use of optical fiber bandwidth and enabling a world record transmission rate of 178 terabits a second the speed achieved is close to the theoretical limit of data transmission set out by american mathematician claude shannon in 1949. i want that bandwidth right install that at my studio you know it was it's it's interesting i mean there's two things that kind of jumped out at me about this story the first one uh what becca was kind of getting to about um 24 000 i think for 50 kilometers or per kilometer whatever it was um to to do the math was there yeah it was there we've butchered it so far but that's right but significantly cheaper significantly make this upgrade than to lay new fiber well yeah and so interestingly enough uh this summer or i guess this spring when when covid kind of brought the world to its knees uh at our my church we were looking to stream uh once we started getting back into the building we had really slow internet like half meg upload ouch yeah right so we reached out to different isps and we said okay what would it take to run you know first we looked into fiverr then we looked into dsl then we looked into cable the one kilometer actually i think it's 0.8 kilometers from the junction box at the corner to where our property line was and every quote we got was six figures or more yeah and i'm like we're talking a kilometer and then i'm hearing this and i'm like this is amazing but at the same time the fact that it's utilizing light and i mean here we are in a studio with light bulbs all around us now they're all led so that's not quite the same thing but how neat would it be if this technology could be advanced to the point where we're getting our internet off a light bulb if it's if it's through like how neat would that be like it's gotta be a little more refined than that i mean fiber optics are i i agree but you look at where the internet was 25 years ago yeah like imagine 15 years from now you flick on a light and boom like oh jeff your predicament that you have at your church or that you had presumably you've found a solution at least to get your body oh okay so you're wireless so you're getting about 20 megs per second uh 20 up 45 down yeah okay yeah so that's not bad that's pretty good no we could stream that's good expensive wouldn't it be cheaper this is just a crazy thought but buy the property on the corner that's near the junction box buy the property and have them run a six foot length from the junction box to a little tiny tower and put a ubiquity antenna on that that is pointed at your church that has like air fiber you know which is like gigabit a second you know it's funny we have we actually have our sign there that we rent from the person who owns the property so put a little ubiquity antenna on top of your sign connect it to the fiber and you'd have to have like some kind of a box that powers everything and and keeps it secure from it's got a powered light anyway well there you go so now put it free so then beam that beam that to your church you can get gigabit per second internet for the cost of a six foot length of fiber run i actually think the box is like a foot from the pole well there you go that's your answer where were you six months ago i don't know nobody asked me and this is what came to me just now but you