Increasing Speed 6u2i49
s: Alex 1a6c65
Increasing Speed 6u2i49
How can I increase my speed?
Any suggestions?
It's currently on default and it s at the speed between 70 and 120..
Many thanks.
Any suggestions?
It's currently on default and it s at the speed between 70 and 120..
Many thanks.
Re: Increasing Speed 6y643
Anybody?
2h3739
What is your internet connection speed? It will be given in kbps which is kilo bits per second. But the file open dia Windows gives speed in KBps which is Kilo Bytes per second. In the icon menu of FDM you have light mode, medium mode and heavy mode. Try setting it to heavy mode. Also right click the file to and against Advanced select "Grant all bandwidth for this " I am also new to FDM. Try these steps. It might work. All the best.
Raghavan

Raghavan
2h3739
Try this also. In the create dialog click on Advanced button at the bottom and select "Ignore all restrictions" I just now saw this in the help manual. Go through the help manual. options and advanced settings.
Re: Increasing Speed 6y643
Anonymous wrote:
It's currently on default and it s at the speed between 70 and 120..
You lucky bitch. Mine s at a maximum of 70KB/s.
Reason? The ISP plan I have.
Right now there's a friend pissing me off via chat bragging about his 500KB/s and how he got Ubuntu ed in 20 minutes.
2h3739
The things stated above don't work for me
It just keeps at the same speed before I used FDM. Anyone know what might be the problem here?

2h3739
Do you expect FDM to make miracles?? The problem is your connection limit. Try www.speedtest.net, that will tell you the fastest you can go. To get more than that, you\'d have to pay a better plan to your ISP.
2h3739
i checked my speed thr speed test and it keeps coming above 500kbs to a maximum of 1.5 mbps i dind down load any thing yet but will my speed reaally go tht high
2h3739
Hi guys. I want to report a similar question to anybody. I'm new in dsl connection, I've a router adsl2 and from the status option I have the following report:
DSL Status: Connected
DSL Modulation Mode: G.dmt
DSL Path Mode: Interleaved
Downstream Rate: 8544 kbps
Upstream Rate: 512 kbps
Downstream Margin: 14 db
Upstream Margin: 24 db
Downstream Line Attenuation: 28 db
Upstream Line Attenuation: 7.5 db
Downstream Transmit Power: 11 db
Upstream Transmit Power: 19 db
At this momment I with FDM and the maximmum speed is about 700 KB/s. Is this O.K. or not? Sould I expect more speed and how can I force the program to use all the available speed? By the way few days ago I had speed of 1320 KB/s.
Thanks for the replies.
DSL Status: Connected
DSL Modulation Mode: G.dmt
DSL Path Mode: Interleaved
Downstream Rate: 8544 kbps
Upstream Rate: 512 kbps
Downstream Margin: 14 db
Upstream Margin: 24 db
Downstream Line Attenuation: 28 db
Upstream Line Attenuation: 7.5 db
Downstream Transmit Power: 11 db
Upstream Transmit Power: 19 db
At this momment I with FDM and the maximmum speed is about 700 KB/s. Is this O.K. or not? Sould I expect more speed and how can I force the program to use all the available speed? By the way few days ago I had speed of 1320 KB/s.
Thanks for the replies.
2h3739
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2h3739
ACK! Sorry about that. I was saying go to dslreports' website. Choose "tools" then "tweak test". You need to see what it says about your Receive Window (RWIN). If you're using XP, the default is 17520, I have mine set for something like 75500.
RWIN (T Receive Window) is the amount of data that your computer can accept without acknowledging the sender. If the sender has not received acknowledgment for the first packet it sent, it will stop and wait. If this wait exceeds a certain limit, it may even retransmit. This is how T achieves reliable data transfer.
Anyway, this start/stop action slows down the throughput considerably in some cases. Hence, RWIN should be large enough to sustain continuous data transfer. By default, this window is too small (8760 for Windows 95/98/98SE/NT and 17520 for Windows ME/2000/XP) for many types of DSL and Cable (Broadband).
Raising RWIN creates a larger window, which allows more information to come through non-stop, up to a point. After this point, no difference will be noticed for the particular connection. For each , this point can/will vary and is determined by (bandwidth * delay) product.
Please note that there is no single value for all hosts on the Internet. You have to allocate some reasonable extra RWIN (say 20-25%) for variance from average latency
RWIN (T Receive Window) is the amount of data that your computer can accept without acknowledging the sender. If the sender has not received acknowledgment for the first packet it sent, it will stop and wait. If this wait exceeds a certain limit, it may even retransmit. This is how T achieves reliable data transfer.
Anyway, this start/stop action slows down the throughput considerably in some cases. Hence, RWIN should be large enough to sustain continuous data transfer. By default, this window is too small (8760 for Windows 95/98/98SE/NT and 17520 for Windows ME/2000/XP) for many types of DSL and Cable (Broadband).
Raising RWIN creates a larger window, which allows more information to come through non-stop, up to a point. After this point, no difference will be noticed for the particular connection. For each , this point can/will vary and is determined by (bandwidth * delay) product.
Please note that there is no single value for all hosts on the Internet. You have to allocate some reasonable extra RWIN (say 20-25%) for variance from average latency
2h3739
You can certainly get the full juice of your internet connection with FDM. If you have a really fast internet connection, you can tweak the no of sections FDM use to a file.
Under options\network\ tweak the max no of connections to 12. You can also increase the no of connections to a server(I don't recommend that because of ethics).
Under options\network\ tweak the max no of connections to 12. You can also increase the no of connections to a server(I don't recommend that because of ethics).
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