Csomag tördelési hiba

From Joe

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(Csomag tördelési hiba)
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In reality, pabbroly 8 Mbps is about the max. that's TRULY advantageous to pay for, currently, with 2-4 Mbps being OK.24 Mbps etc scam deals are a waste of money at the moment, as the majority of the billions of site servers around the globe are designed to mete out a hugely restrained, trickle feed of data, to ensure that as many potential users as possible will have a bandwidth portal available to log-on to their site, boost visitor numbers, increase audience-reach thus advertising spread, with SOME information flow reserving a lot of bandwidth on standby for any future potential visitors.This ensures that everyone on their site, and those yet to visit, will get a little bit of a  s l o w  information data stream, rather than the first user to visit any site gets phenomenal speed, rapid link transition & immediate page browsing, with the rest of the World being locked out from that site until that user logs off, ready for the next-in-line exclusive viewer to visit, and so on !!!!Give it another 6 to 8 years, and we may get a more general, GENUINE 6 to 8 Mbps response from any updated Web site servers, DNS servers, more advanced fibre-optic systems and thinner chip technology.Unfortunately, the MARKETING of the theoretical MAX speed of the information transfer rate from your workstation to your ISP server fools most users into thinking that that is the speed of transceiving from your ISP, around the Earth, to the website you're viewing, and back to you You've got to laugh at the conning marketing, eh?  Next they'll be kidding us that an infinite number of MEGAPIXELS on a tiny camera imaging chip will give a better photograph, rather than the fact that it's actually ADDING grain and colour mis-registration to try and fit so many pixel triads on such a miniscule area It certainly helps sell MILLIONS of cameras to the uninformed.Shame, as maybe up to an 8 Mp chip, with quality coated lens elements and RAW picture processing algorithms is all you need for a 10 ft x 8 ft bigger-than-life-size QUALITY poster print !!!A severe case of Pixel-Envy !!!!?
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Your ISP will tell you (rightly) that they are not responsible for stmros. Read your contract, you will see that nowhere do they promise you uninterrupted service. It will say somewhere that the cable internet is an FM based service, and is subject to variable performance and subject to weather.Going by cable from your laptop to the router would make a small improvement in speed and reliability at your end, but will not make any difference to the ISPs internet feed being interrupted by stmros.You can either move, or you can buy a cellular 3G or LTE data service or satellite Internet service as backup to your cable and a dual-WAN router that is cellular modem capable. Both of those are slower and more expensive than cable, and are not immune to blackouts either.Trust me, you are not paying for a 100% uptime line. If you have a thousand or more a month to spend, ask your ISP about a dedicated line, preferably fiber. Once you have picked yourself up off the floor when they tell you the installation cost, you can decide if you are getting your $50 a month worth.

Current revision as of 16:04, 20 May 2013

Your ISP will tell you (rightly) that they are not responsible for stmros. Read your contract, you will see that nowhere do they promise you uninterrupted service. It will say somewhere that the cable internet is an FM based service, and is subject to variable performance and subject to weather.Going by cable from your laptop to the router would make a small improvement in speed and reliability at your end, but will not make any difference to the ISPs internet feed being interrupted by stmros.You can either move, or you can buy a cellular 3G or LTE data service or satellite Internet service as backup to your cable and a dual-WAN router that is cellular modem capable. Both of those are slower and more expensive than cable, and are not immune to blackouts either.Trust me, you are not paying for a 100% uptime line. If you have a thousand or more a month to spend, ask your ISP about a dedicated line, preferably fiber. Once you have picked yourself up off the floor when they tell you the installation cost, you can decide if you are getting your $50 a month worth.

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