Actually, this is NOT a measure of the speed of public WiFi. If you read the criteria of the study, it says that it was based both on speed and on "customer satisfaction", which is an amorphous quality that is heavily based on culture. So a country with super fast internet, that has a population that like to gripe about technology, will be lower than a country with slower internet, but easygoing tech users... Meaningless.
Plus, those "measurements" were taken at different times, with different methods, by different groups.
In other words, this is a silly "study" and means almost nothing in to relation internet speed.
Sorry, mineistaken, but I don't think you looked carefully enough at the article.
.
|