You are so right (as usual).Are you connected with a wire? After a long time of network problems I switched from wifi to ethernet and it is 3 times faster and more importantly, there are no network failures.
Means is there a limit to the GB that you can up- and down-load - and when you hit that limit they will "shape" the connection so that it is slower - in an effort to remind you that you're a Flippin' Bandwidth HOG so behave yourself. Like - you used too much water and we're making your pipes thinner.I do not know what it means!
I'm not sure if that lost something in translation (no worries, though: your Australian is way better than my Malay) but slowness due to low signal strength and slowness due to isp (radio? backend?) bandwidth congestion ("fully used") are two different things.Here is my mobile 4G speed tested on laptop (using hotspot). Signal is 1 bar out of 4. I complained to my ISP and get reply that the capacity is fully used.
Are you connected with a wire? After a long time of network problems I switched from wifi to ethernet and it is 3 times faster and more importantly, there are no network failures.
Great minds think alike ? I was introduced to this issue by my teenage online-game-playing son, who can "feel the lag" down to the millisecond, and also seemingly every single dropped byte and packet retransmission ?You are so right (as usual) ... if I connect via WiFi I reach about 42.5 Mbps (download) while via Ethernet cable... 190Mbps!
Next week I will go to buy a... long Ethernet cable ?
Lucky you! Here (Australia) a common ploy by ISPs offering high-speed low-cost is to limit the total download GB, and then throttle the speed down rather than cut the service completely, so that they can still call it unlimited.I do not know what it means!
I think that, with your luck and optimism, it'll be 200 Mbps forever. ?I have a contract for up to 200Mbps-upload (fiber+copper) so that speed is excellent (I don't think it will be like this for very long, now it is because the contract is only 2 days and the provider wants to make a good impression)
As far as I know here in Italy only SIM cards have limited Gb.Lucky you! Here (Australia) a common ploy by ISPs offering high-speed low-cost is to limit the total download GB, and then throttle the speed down rather than cut the service completely, so that they can still call it unlimited.
My parents are on a $30 per month plan that is intended as a phone-replacement service. Includes phone number, cable, device and 10 GB data per month which is enough to cover 200 hours of phone calls. I thought it'd also be enough to cover mum's sudoku games on her iPad, but we got stung by iOS updates chewing up 3 GB each try. When the 10 GB cap is hit, speed reduces to 32 kbps, which makes the phone service barely intelligible. Yes, I have complained to the ISP about this: if they upped the capped speed to 64 kbps or didn't cap VOIP packets, then we'd be sweet.
Happily, the iPad takes a SIM, so currently we're paying an extra $10 per month for that, which has the benefit of the iPad still working when they take it on holidays anywhere in Australia (well, anywhere within the 97% population coverage area, anyway) (including around and on top of Ayers Rock a couple of years ago).
How bad do you think! !! I have never been lucky, much less optimistic!I think that, with your luck and optimism, it'll be 200 Mbps forever.
I used to have an unlimited data SIM, loaned it to a friend, somehow it got lost. Spewin, because Optus discontinued the plan but active plans were still honoured, turns out those SIMs were trading for $700. But we got our money's worth out of it anyway: we'd moved into a house that didn't have a connected phone cable, and rather than pay the $300 to rectify that, we set the SIM up as a hotspot and the four of us gave it a bit of a hammering for the next few years.As far as I know here in Italy only SIM cards have limited Gb.
I think good. I see plenty of optimism. Two out of three emojis agree.How bad do you think! !! I have never been lucky, much less optimistic!
??
I also not sure why the customer support give me such a reply as an answer. Maybe he/she just want to close the ticket. My mobile signal used to be strong (full 4 bars) most of the time but since the last 2 months, it has dropped to 2 bars and sometimes 1 bar. It makes different if the signal is much stronger contribute to faster speed. When I move away to my bed room (my apartment is corner lot) which is close to open air, the signal indeed improve 1 bar. I tried with 1 bar signal and manage to download huge file at 100Kbps from certain servers. So I can say the speed is not consistent however the ISP I use is considered the fastest ISP provider for mobile broadband. On the other side, for fiber optic Internet, the speed is much stable and high for decent usage.slowness due to low signal strength and slowness due to isp (radio? backend?) bandwidth congestion ("fully used") are two different things.
More like probably than maybe. Although it is plausible that your nearest tower has so many users trying to connect to it, that the network is bumping some of you to a less-used tower that is further away, and more distance = less signal strength.I also not sure why the customer support give me such a reply as an answer. Maybe he/she just want to close the ticket.
A good assumption.I assume you mean using USB cable to connect from my iPhone to my laptop.
A possibly-bad assumption. Give it a go, and ideally turn off iPhone wifi and bluetooth at the same time, so the personal hotspot is only via USB.I never tried it and I assume it won’t help much.
You are not alone. ?I am a cheapskate person and only use mobile plan.
???You are not alone. ?
At uni only 6 years ago. Hey guys and girls, we have a young gun here ?Fastest I ever saw was when I did a test at uni six years ago,
Hey, here's a spooky coincidence... look what I just stumbled across that I last saw about three years ago:At uni only 6 years ago. Hey guys and girls, we have a young gun here ?
I think lol ?
I was 6 years old then. ?Hey, here's a spooky coincidence... look what I just stumbled across that I last saw about three years ago:
View attachment 117384
I would have preferred 8080 rather than 4040 for my student number but that's ok, for bitters can't be choosers.
All of the stuff listed here is Older than you . . . the confused 4004 chiphere's a spooky coincidence..
the registrar of that place in Mellies was dyslexixicic-ish4040 for my student number
Nice rating as well.11.1 seconds
Didn't realize I'd be needing it quite this soon ?https://www.speedtest.net/result/11832980093.png yay ? better than average ?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?