โSep-05-2014 07:21 AM
โSep-06-2014 10:37 AM
โSep-06-2014 06:01 AM
rwbradley wrote:cochise49 wrote:
Some parks merely re-broadcast the one DSL line that they pay for. That means, bandwidth meant for a family of 5 is now shared with 20 or more. Total bandwidth will never be more than the park pays for. One park we use has something like one T1 line coming into the park. Not sure about amount of bandwidth but, they have a rule that you can't stream netflix, etc. so as not to inhibit others use of the internet. Not sure how they would know, but frequently, I resort to our Jet Pack for email etc. Verizon LTE too expensive for netflix.
T1 is only 1.54mb down and 1.54mb up
โSep-05-2014 05:23 PM
cochise49 wrote:
Some parks merely re-broadcast the one DSL line that they pay for. That means, bandwidth meant for a family of 5 is now shared with 20 or more. Total bandwidth will never be more than the park pays for. One park we use has something like one T1 line coming into the park. Not sure about amount of bandwidth but, they have a rule that you can't stream netflix, etc. so as not to inhibit others use of the internet. Not sure how they would know, but frequently, I resort to our Jet Pack for email etc. Verizon LTE too expensive for netflix.
โSep-05-2014 05:02 PM
wa8yxm wrote:
I think more campgrounds should simply close port 80,, This will block most casual Netflix et-al users.. (Would not even slow me down, but then I don't do netflix)
โSep-05-2014 03:52 PM
โSep-05-2014 01:03 PM
โSep-05-2014 12:44 PM
โSep-05-2014 08:42 AM
kcmoedoe wrote:ChopperBill wrote:Possible, but it opens an entire new can of worms. Set the throttling too low, everyone complains about speeds. Set it at an acceptable speed for basic usage, the high usage people still complain. Set it high enough for most apps but not things like streaming HD movies, then you get people who just have the movie sent to their storage devices, even if it takes several hours. Get several of these, and the system still gets overloaded, and it is actually a worse situation, because the system can't speed up when the network clears and erase the backlog. It becomes a situation like plumbing where 2/3s of a pipe is clogged, the water won't flow faster even if you open the faucet fully.
Just wondering. Is it possible for an ISP to put a block on high data use down loads in a large sharing environment?
โSep-05-2014 08:38 AM
ChopperBill wrote:
Just wondering. Is it possible for an ISP to put a block on high data use down loads in a large sharing environment?
โSep-05-2014 08:23 AM
โSep-05-2014 08:11 AM
ChopperBill wrote:Possible, but it opens an entire new can of worms. Set the throttling too low, everyone complains about speeds. Set it at an acceptable speed for basic usage, the high usage people still complain. Set it high enough for most apps but not things like streaming HD movies, then you get people who just have the movie sent to their storage devices, even if it takes several hours. Get several of these, and the system still gets overloaded, and it is actually a worse situation, because the system can't speed up when the network clears and erase the backlog. It becomes a situation like plumbing where 2/3s of a pipe is clogged, the water won't flow faster even if you open the faucet fully.
Just wondering. Is it possible for an ISP to put a block on high data use down loads in a large sharing environment?
โSep-05-2014 07:53 AM
โSep-05-2014 07:38 AM
โSep-05-2014 07:35 AM
โSep-05-2014 07:31 AM