FiOS Router Issues and Non-Technical Landlords
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@Hubtech said:
it's hilarious how much misguided traction EVERY SINGLE ONE of AJs posts get....
Does anyone here really care about anything in this thread?
The quality of posting in general has gone downhill lately
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@IRJ said:
@Hubtech said:
it's hilarious how much misguided traction EVERY SINGLE ONE of AJs posts get....
Does anyone here really care about anything in this thread?
The quality of posting in general has gone downhill lately
I think that goes for here and over there.
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Back to the thread, I have noticed that AT&T definitely throttles my connection. I get a better speed when using VPN. AT&T slows certain things down like Netflix, Hulu, Youtube, and other high traffic sources. Videos play 10 times better when I use anonymous VPN even though my connection is technically slower.
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@IRJ said:
Comcast does throttling too me too. But Isn't this illegal now? or when does the net neutrality take affect?
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@IRJ said:
Back to the thread, I have noticed that AT&T definitely throttles my connection. I get a better speed when using VPN. AT&T slows certain things down like Netflix, Hulu, Youtube, and other high traffic sources. Videos play 10 times better when I use anonymous VPN even though my connection is technically slower.
It's not throttled, it's a peering issue.
Net neutrality rules do not fix this.
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If you can't schedule a reboot, buy one of those lamp timer things.
Gah, I love a good analog solution to a digital problem.
Edit: These things
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@MattSpeller said:
If you can't schedule a reboot, buy one of those lamp timer things.
Gah, I love a good analog solution to a digital problem.
Edit: These things
As much bandwith as AJ is sucking, he might just get his own Internet connection. His landlord can't be happy with his decreased network speed lol
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@IRJ said:
As much bandwith as AJ is sucking, he might just get his own Internet connection. His landlord can't be happy with his decreased network speed lol
lol probably true, but a one time $10 purchase is way way way cheaper I know that's what I would do
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@MattSpeller said:
@IRJ said:
As much bandwith as AJ is sucking, he might just get his own Internet connection. His landlord can't be happy with his decreased network speed lol
lol probably true, but a one time $10 purchase is way way way cheaper I know that's what I would do
He might end up getting kicked out over his internet usage lol
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@PSX_Defector said:
@IRJ said:
Back to the thread, I have noticed that AT&T definitely throttles my connection. I get a better speed when using VPN. AT&T slows certain things down like Netflix, Hulu, Youtube, and other high traffic sources. Videos play 10 times better when I use anonymous VPN even though my connection is technically slower.
It's not throttled, it's a peering issue.
Net neutrality rules do not fix this.
If they get better speeds through a different peer, isn't it a routing issue?
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@JaredBusch said:
Now stop being stupid.
I don't think anyone is really saying @thanksajdotcom is stupid. Or at least that's not my intent. Sorry if it comes across that way. If we thought that we wouldn't even try. The point is to be more careful about the thinks you post online. There's a lot of people on here and spiceworks. It's not unlikely that someone you work with or would otherwise be a contact would be on here to see these things. Weather it's illegal or not it's going to be perceived as questionable. with will reflect on their opinion & judgment of your character - even if it shouldn't, it does.
Just Posting the following:
Does anyone know off-hand if you can schedule tasks in a FiOS router? I believe you can but I won't know for sure until I get another look at it.
And maybe stating that it needed to be a reboot would suffice and avoid the possibility of issues and maintain professionalism.
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@IRJ said:
@MattSpeller said:
If you can't schedule a reboot, buy one of those lamp timer things.
Gah, I love a good analog solution to a digital problem.
Edit: These things
As much bandwith as AJ is sucking, he might just get his own Internet connection. His landlord can't be happy with his decreased network speed lol
He doesn't notice. I'm very careful to throttle, and the powerline adapter I use limits how fast it can even go anyways.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@JaredBusch said:
Now stop being stupid.
I don't think anyone is really saying @thanksajdotcom is stupid. Or at least that's not my intent. Sorry if it comes across that way. If we thought that we wouldn't even try. The point is to be more careful about the thinks you post online. There's a lot of people on here and spiceworks. It's not unlikely that someone you work with or would otherwise be a contact would be on here to see these things. Weather it's illegal or not it's going to be perceived as questionable. with will reflect on their opinion & judgment of your character - even if it shouldn't, it does.
Just Posting the following:
Does anyone know off-hand if you can schedule tasks in a FiOS router? I believe you can but I won't know for sure until I get another look at it.
And maybe stating that it needed to be a reboot would suffice and avoid the possibility of issues and maintain professionalism.
Noted.
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Cron job has been setup. I am logging the results. I have two cron jobs setup to run at 5AM on one server, and 5:01AM on another. In theory, the second one should always fail, but if it doesn't, or that one server is having an issue, I'm covered. It's during a time no one is ever consciously online.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@PSX_Defector said:
@IRJ said:
Back to the thread, I have noticed that AT&T definitely throttles my connection. I get a better speed when using VPN. AT&T slows certain things down like Netflix, Hulu, Youtube, and other high traffic sources. Videos play 10 times better when I use anonymous VPN even though my connection is technically slower.
It's not throttled, it's a peering issue.
Net neutrality rules do not fix this.
If they get better speeds through a different peer, isn't it a routing issue?
There's only one route to Netflix though. And considering they peer with Level3, which tons of traffic goes through as well, it will cause a bottleneck to them.
Netflix et. al. are doing the best they can to get things over to their CDNs, which will ease congestion on that link. They also are working with ISPs on getting a peer box inside of the network to send that traffic towards instead. These things have been done in the ISP scape since the earliest days of the internet. My old ISP had upstream links with InterNAP, which would pump out super clean traffic across pipes to various game servers. When your ping is super low, as in sub 10ms to the game server, it was great.
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That doesn't explain how a VPN fixes the performance issues, though. That suggests that a VPN could not fix it. If a VPN fixes it it sounds like either there is alternate route or it is really being throttled.
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@scottalanmiller - if still hosting a WP site on a home network, that could be eating up the additional bandwidth, causing Verizon to throttle the connection. IMHO, the landlord isn't incorrect in saying that it was fine until the extra traffic started being passed on his FiOS connection. I would be a little upset myself.
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@Bill-Kindle said:
@scottalanmiller - if still hosting a WP site on a home network, that could be eating up the additional bandwidth, causing Verizon to throttle the connection. IMHO, the landlord isn't incorrect in saying that it was fine until the extra traffic started being passed on his FiOS connection. I would be a little upset myself.
WP traffic is just HTTP, and it's not like I'm getting thousands of hits a day. Very minimal impact from any website.
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@scottalanmiller said:
That doesn't explain how a VPN fixes the performance issues, though. That suggests that a VPN could not fix it. If a VPN fixes it it sounds like either there is alternate route or it is really being throttled.
Peers are not equal from place to place. My OC-192 might be saturated but someone else's OC-3 is pretty wide open. Netflix would have a giant pipe because they would allow in everything and load balanced to other pipes. A very normal thing.
It is routing, and it is not routing. Its a complex issue that net neutrality doesn't necessarily fix. It's just inherent in the nature of the backbone traffic management.
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@PSX_Defector said:
@scottalanmiller said:
That doesn't explain how a VPN fixes the performance issues, though. That suggests that a VPN could not fix it. If a VPN fixes it it sounds like either there is alternate route or it is really being throttled.
Peers are not equal from place to place. My OC-192 might be saturated but someone else's OC-3 is pretty wide open. Netflix would have a giant pipe because they would allow in everything and load balanced to other pipes. A very normal thing.
It is routing, and it is not routing. Its a complex issue that net neutrality doesn't necessarily fix. It's just inherent in the nature of the backbone traffic management.
Net neutrality doesn't fix it at that level or that point along the chain.. but it does fix it at the likes of comcast's network, or any other ISP that's throttling it.