Hi everyone,
Quick question. I recent switched to a 200 Mbits per second connection and I'm still getting relatively sluggish page loads. The speed test show that my connection starts at 2 Mbits per second when the test site pings it, then the connection ramps up over the next few seconds 5... 20... 40.. 100 etc.
Is this normal? I would have thought that the connection would already be faster and active when it's "asked for".
I guess what I'm saying is what's the point in having a super fast connection if it takes 6 seconds to get up to full speed every time you contact the server.
I have a screen shot of my speedtest data, but the forum says I can add an attchement
Ryan
Slow ping – takes a while to get to regular speed
Many of these online speed tests use multiple "threads" to ramp up to fill up your available bandwidth, that is why they may appear to start slower. TCP/IP in general can start slow and ramp up the "TCP Window" buffer to be able to utilize higher speeds. Depending on your Operating system, this can be optimizer, have you tried the TCP Optimizer?
There are also other external factors to consider, like routers' congestion, latency, the ability of servers to send that amount of data to each user, etc. If web pages seem sluggish, try doing a traceroute to see where the delay occurs to that particular server. It could even be something simple like DNS hostname resolution, or your local Wireless router slowing you down. We have a number of NIC/LAN tweaks available in articles on the main site as well.
I hope this helps
There are also other external factors to consider, like routers' congestion, latency, the ability of servers to send that amount of data to each user, etc. If web pages seem sluggish, try doing a traceroute to see where the delay occurs to that particular server. It could even be something simple like DNS hostname resolution, or your local Wireless router slowing you down. We have a number of NIC/LAN tweaks available in articles on the main site as well.
I hope this helps
There are some Linux tweaks that theoretically should work with Macs as well: https://www.speedguide.net/articles/lin ... tweaks-121
Still, I'd start with traceroutes/pings to detect if there are any obvious issues.
Still, I'd start with traceroutes/pings to detect if there are any obvious issues.