Shadow893
lel
+75|7161|England
ok heres the deal - whenever i start to dl anything it starts with a really high rate ( sometimes over 2000kb/s) and then over the course of the dl can drop to about 100kb/s.

i now accept this as being totally retarded and hop the dl finishes before the speed drops to low but why does it do this?

does anyone else get affected by this at all?
Stormscythe
Aiming for the head
+88|7018|EUtopia | Austria
Do you dl with Internet Explorer?

So obviously, it's loading to your temporary internet cache even before you klick the button to download. Then, within the first few seconds you obviously get added to your dl-rate what has already been loaded into the cache.
Does this explanation sound reasonable to you?
Ninja_Monkey
I TK For Blackhawks
+60|7034|UK

Stormscythe wrote:

Do you dl with Internet Explorer?

So obviously, it's loading to your temporary internet cache even before you klick the button to download. Then, within the first few seconds you obviously get added to your dl-rate what has already been loaded into the cache.
Does this explanation sound reasonable to you?
what he said is correct
Shadow893
lel
+75|7161|England
i see now - it all makes sense. thanks for the info dudes
CrazeD
Member
+368|7142|Maine
Your download speed can never exceed the max upload rate of the server.

Even if you have a 2gb/s connection, if the server has a rate cap of 100kb/s that is what you will download at.
']['error
Banned
+630|7113|The Netherlands

Stormscythe wrote:

Do you dl with Internet Explorer?

So obviously, it's loading to your temporary internet cache even before you klick the button to download. Then, within the first few seconds you obviously get added to your dl-rate what has already been loaded into the cache.
Does this explanation sound reasonable to you?
never knew this +1 for you
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7070|132 and Bush

Packet Loss measures the reliability of a connection. A known chunk of data is sent to the router and then the router is supposed to send the same data back unaltered (echo). In the case of something like ping, several packets are sent out over the course of a couple seconds. So, if 10 packets were sent out, but only 8 made it back, then that would be 20% packet loss; so the more packets that are sent, the more accurate the picture of what the actual packet loss is. In a perfect world 0% packet loss is what we all want - every packet we send out makes it to where it's supposed to go. In reality, some packet loss is probably going to happen, but as long as it is under 5% or so you shouldn't even notice. So just remember that the higher the packet loss percentage, the slower the connection will work because in most instances it has to send the same piece of information several times.

Try some of the analyzers and tweaks here http://www.speedguide.net/ .
Xbone Stormsurgezz

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