Cantv Test De Velocidad [ TESTED | REPORT ]
"Is anyone else's internet down? I'm trying to watch La Usurpadora on Netflix."
Marcos didn't curse. He didn't slam the desk. He just stared at the numbers. According to CANTV, he was getting exactly what he paid for. Plan Básico: up to 4 Mbps. But 2.3 was the ghost in the machine—always there, never enough. cantv test de velocidad
"Fine for Facebook." That was the mantra. But Marcos wasn't uploading selfies. He was uploading the future of a public market—ventilation systems, electrical layouts, seismic reinforcements. "Is anyone else's internet down
Marcos leaned back in his worn-out office chair, the cheap plastic groaning under his weight. The clock on his laptop screen read 11:47 PM. In the corner of his living room in Caracas, the modem from CANTV—the state-owned telecommunications company—blinked its tiny LEDs: power, DSL, internet, data. He just stared at the numbers
He opened his browser and typed the URL he knew by heart: http://www.cantv.net/velocidad . The page loaded slowly, as if the website itself was struggling to wake up. It was a relic of web design from 2010: a blue gradient, a cartoonish lightning bolt, and a big button that read "Iniciar Prueba."


