Please, I implore you, to read the line you quoted again, and then perhaps pull out the old Oxford English, and look up what "very few" means.
I'll be generous and give you a hint: it doesn't mean none.
But your example also has great relevance to the "familiar" sentence in my original comment which was:
> 2.5G is rapidly approaching, if not already past the point, for a lot of people where a single machine will never use all of that capacity, and the advantage of higher total bandwidth is to support multiple people doing high bandwidth tasks.
I italicised the part that I knew people would somehow ignore in my original comment and I've done it again, because obviously once wasn't enough.
Here, let me pull out the important words yet again just to make it really clear:
I'll be generous and give you a hint: it doesn't mean none.
But your example also has great relevance to the "familiar" sentence in my original comment which was:
> 2.5G is rapidly approaching, if not already past the point, for a lot of people where a single machine will never use all of that capacity, and the advantage of higher total bandwidth is to support multiple people doing high bandwidth tasks.
I italicised the part that I knew people would somehow ignore in my original comment and I've done it again, because obviously once wasn't enough.
Here, let me pull out the important words yet again just to make it really clear:
> for a lot of people