How Geography Affects Network Latency

hostinginternetlatencynetworking

I have the option of hosting our database/web server at a managed hosting company on the East Coast (US) or one on the West Coast (US). Our company is based out of New York City, and both hosting providers give our box a dedicated T1 line.

How much of a performance hit (assuming all other factors are equal) would I be taking in terms of network latency if I went with the one on the west coast as opposed to the one on the east coast? I'm not too sure how geography affects internet speeds when the numbers and distances get really large (T1's and above, and thousands of miles).

Thanks!

Best Answer

There is a distance delay and all other things being equal (routing efficiency, processing overhead, congestion, etc.) a site on the west coast accessed by a host on the east coast is going to take longer than if that site is on the east coast but we're talking milliseconds here.