
#Verizon mifi 4510l 669e 720p#
Assuming low latency, such a connection will handle gaming on a cloud server, too - both OnLive and Gaikai require about 5Mbps to stream a playable 720p title into your home.
#Verizon mifi 4510l 669e 1080p#
That's enough to play back Netflix and YouTube 1080p content, which tops out at around 5Mbps. According to content delivery network Akamai's latest "State of the Internet" report, the average US broadband connection is just 5.1 megabits per second. That may not sound like a lot, but let me put things in context for a second.

Even though Verizon whitepapers list 100Mbps peak theoretical download speeds (and a similarly fantastic 50Mbps up), the carrier quotes 5-12Mbps downlinks and 2-5Mbps uplinks in all its marketing materials as what you can expect in the real world. As new data networks pile on more subscribers, the speeds tend to dip, and Verizon had the foresight to set relatively low expectations to begin with. "What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas," they say - and Verizon's superlative CES blanket of LTE surely did - but more importantly, Verizon never really promised such speeds to begin with. Originally, I figured the honeymoon wouldn't last. With nearly twice the bandwidth of my wired home internet connection and latency like I'd never seen without a physical cable, I could effortlessly stream multiple 1080p videos, play OnLive games, and even remotely connect to my desktop home computer and control it fairly well.


We had some wild times together in Vegas, doing things I'd never conceived of doing on a cellular data connection before.
