Upload/download speed and device streaming claims are based on maximum wired speeds. Leave a wide buffer of bandwidth to account for other tasks, other users, and technical glitches that may come along unexpectedly. So if you’re using Zoom all day-or you’re regularly on another video conferencing app, like Skype, Facebook Messenger, Google Hangouts or WhatsApp-don’t stick to bare-minimum speeds. It’s frustrating-and potentially disastrous if you’re conducting important business. Voices start speeding up and slowing down as the connection struggles to play catch-up with the live feed. There are delays between the video and audio. In our experience, sluggish Wi-Fi makes for herky-jerky video calls. Honestly, though, you’re going to want a fast and consistent internet connection for this sort of thing. According to the app’s bandwidth requirements, you don’t even need 1 Mbps of download speeds to get a Zoom video call going in 480p SD resolution. Technically, Zoom doesn’t require a whole lot of speed to work properly. **Zoom uses the term “high-quality video,” which doesn’t describe any industry-standard video resolution, but we interpret it to mean standard resolution of 480p. For very high speed services, we recommend downloading the speed test files from our Content Delivery Network, listed above.*According to bandwidth requirements on Zoom’s website.
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