Latvia ranks No. 2 in broadband speeds

Perhaps only geeks will find this interesting, but it’s worth noting nonetheless: Latvia has the second-fastest broadband download speeds in the world, according to the U.S.-based diagnostics company Ookla.

Ookla runs Speedtest.net, a service that allows consumers to test the speed of their Internet connections. Tests run during the past 30 days, Speedtest.net reported May 24, show that consumers in South Korea have the fastest download speeds, while Latvia ranks No. 2.

South Koreans on average experience a download speed of 34.14 Mbps (megabits per second), while Latvians get 24.29 Mbps.

The rest of the Top 10 includes Moldova, Japan, Sweden, Romania, Bulgaria, the Netherlands, Lithuania and Portugal.

Estonia came in No. 19. The United States is 26th and Russia is 28th.

On a city-by-city basis, Speedtest.net found the Seoul ranked No. 1 with an average download speed of 34.66 Mbps. Rīga ranked No. 2 with a speed of 27.90 Mbps. Kaunas, Lithuania’s second-largest city, ranked No. 10 with a speed of 17.48 Mbps.

Upload tests showed South Korea at No. 1 and Latvia at No. 2. Lithuania ranked No. 4 and Russia was No. 10.

However, when comparing the quality of broadband connections, a different picture emerges. In that index, Romania ranks No. 1, Russia is No. 2 and Portugal is No. 3. The United States ranks ninth.

At least 10,000 “packet tests” had to have been run for countries to be listed in the Top Ten rankings.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

Goran Gora releases second album

Singer Goran Gora, now teamed up with a band called The Yrs, has released his sophomore album. Titled Mystyrys Yrs, the compact disc includes 13 tracks, all in English.

The artist, whose real name is Jānis Holšteins, released his first album, Jet Lag, in 2007.

Although the album was released May 24 during a presentation at the I Love You Bar in Rīga, it will not be available for sale until after mid-June. Until then, according to a note on the bar’s website, Mystyrys Yrs can be heard streamed on ORB, draugiem.lv and MySpace.

The album includes guest performances by six artists: frYars of Great Britain on the song “A Dance Away”; Thomas Denver Jonsson on “Old Friends”; Astro’n’out lead singer—and Holšteins’ wife—Māra Upmane–Holšteine on “Garden”; Ksenija Sundejeva, lead singer of the on-indefinite-hiatus Tribes of the City on “Silly Tunes”; Detlef on “Hard Case Heartbreak”; and Andris Grīva on “The List.”

Work on the album took one and a half years. Gora worked on the songs with musicians Kaspars Ansons, Valters Sprūdžs and Edgars Runcis. Together they will now perform as Goran Gora and The Yrs.

The album was released by I Love You Records.

Mystyrys Yrs

Singer Goran Gora’s second album is titled Mystyrys Yrs.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

Pharmacy-themed bar finds place in owner’s ancestral homeland

Kristaps Krēsliņš used to live in Washington, D.C, where he ran a popular little place called the Pharmacy Bar and played rock music. Now he lives in Latvia and runs the Aptieka Bar in Rīga.

Having traveled intermittently to his ancestral homeland with his band—Mācītājs on Acid—since 1989, Krēsliņš and his wife decided it was time to try living the Latvian lifestyle on a more permanent basis and moved to Latvia with their two young daughters. On Nov. 1, 2008, he opened the Aptieka (Pharmacy) Bar in Mazā Miesnieka iela, a small cobblestone street in the Rīga’s Old Town district.

The little bar, a continent away from its namesake, attracts a similar crowd to that in Washington: young musicians, artists, students and design people. The bar also gets its regular expatriate crowd, mainly from the U.S. and Canada.

Though it wasn’t planned that way, in Washington his bar is staffed by men, whereas in Rīga the staff is all female and he generally only employs friends. He has had the same staff for more than four years in America and there hasn’t been any staff turnover in the Rīga bar.  He lets his staff organize their shifts amongst themselves, as he himself is a fairly laid-back individual.

The bar on the ground floor of a historic old building has a modern design but the old stone walls give it the feeling that it’s always been there. In keeping with the pharmacy theme, old bottles used by pharmacists line the shelves. The tables have an interesting touch, with pills and capsules encased under the glass surface. There is a free jukebox with classic and independent rock.

Krēsliņš and his wife say they love the beautiful countryside and the sea, both of which are so accessible from Rīga. The only anxiety Krēsliņš said he has is about the economy, which obviously affects people’s disposable income. However, the bar is breaking even and in these times that’s a measure of success. 

Local friends were a great help with information regarding the opening of a business. Although the number of licenses required are numerous, even including official approval and a license for the bar’s drinks measure, it has never been suggested to him that he should pay a bribe to move things along, Krēsliņš said. In this latter respect he said he believes that Latvia often gets an undeserved bad rap about its business environment, but he does believe that the taxes are too high. Before setting off for Latvia, he remembers his friends in America warning him to be careful because of stories they’d heard about Latvia and questioning whether it was such a good idea, but he has no regrets about having made the move. 

Krēsliņš, who plays rhythm guitar, has good contacts in the Latvian music industry and organizes free shows with high quality musicians for patrons in the basement of his bar twice a month on Sunday nights.         

The pharmacy link comes from Krēsliņš’ grandfather, who was a Rīga pharmacist. An interesting painting overlooking the bar was inspired by a photograph taken of him working in the pharmacy of a refugee camp in Germany.

Further information about the bar is available on its website, www.krogsaptieka.lv.

Aptieka Bar

The Aptieka Bar in Rīga’s Old Town is situated in a historic building and is decorated with elements of a pharmacy. (Photo courtesy of Aptieka Bar)