Picture a Wednesday from a home office in a Ladd's Addition Victorian or a converted Alberta Arts District studio.
Morning standup. You share your screen walking the team through a campaign brief. Upload. Midday deadline. A completed design package goes to a client portal. Upload. Afternoon review. A 3 GB video file transfers to a production partner in Seattle. Upload. End of day. A presentation deck goes out to six stakeholders across three time zones. Upload.
Not one of those moments pulled meaningful data down to your device. Every single one depended on what your connection could send outward from your Portland address.
On Xfinity with a 35 Mbps upload cap each of those tasks takes longer than it should. On AT&T Fiber 300 Mbps each completes before you look away from the screen.