Forum Discussion
State error code 12.1.9 30.101 Off and on for the last week
- 8 years ago
dfbeck wrote:I forgot to mention one other issue, 480p is the max on resolution, after that it buffers every 5 to 10 seconds for 5 to 10 seconds and this is during bonus time. I tried it again this morning at 2:30 am and videos were unwatchable above 480p.
I can't remember if this was ever mentioned, but when you want to watch something in a resolution higher than 480p you will most likely need to turn off, or snooze, your Video Data Saver. The VDS deliberately throttles the service speed when streaming to such that is amenable to 480p, but not higher resolutions. This is done to help save data, as streaming in HD can use up to 3GB or more per hour, vs. around 700MB per hour for SD (480p).
Hope this helps. :)
- 8 years ago
The HughesNet pages do tend to take a little longer for me than most pages, but nowhere near 45 seconds or so. Maybe fifteen seconds or so. Other pages, however, like you listed in a previous post, don't tend to take even that long. Like when I click on Youtube in my favorites it opens in less than ten seconds. Google and Twitter open even faster for me than Youtube.
It's entirely possible that the slow speed you're experiencing when opening those web pages is tied to the the state codes you're seeing. Hopefully the picture of the state codes will help Amanda in figuring out what's going on. That 12.1.9 in the pic is troubling.
BTW, if you're running automatic tests you can set it like in the picture below so that it uses the sizes mentioned. Make sure to tick the nfw box, which means "no forwarding", as in no forwarding the test size, or increasing the test size, when it doesn't last long enough. I put it for every half hour and 12 times, but you can put it for whatever frequency you'd like. It's "Combined", the aforementioned 25MB for download and 4MB for upload, and nfw checked. Using 25MB for each test instead over 100MB should help to save some of that data, even if you do have a lot left at the end of the month. You never know when you might need a lot of it. :)
Amanda, I'm having the same issue with pages timing out again but the state code was reading 0.0.0 so I ran Testmy.net for signal. I've included a screen print that shows upload speeds dropping to .3 Mbps while the download speeds are quite fast. This was tested Friday afternoon but I also ran it at 2:30 am and 7:50 am Saturday morning and had the same results: upwards of 2.5 Mbps until a period where the upload dropped off to less than .4 Mbps. Pages that set to auto refresh like Hughesnet mail log off as does Hughesnet mail and Twitter. As a matter of fact, any site that requests an update logs off and I have to sign back in. Needing to log back in to Hughesnet mail or Usage is an issue since even when there is no problem it takes 45 to 55 seconds just for the first page to load. I hope you are still investigating this since I didn't open a new topic. DaveI forgot to mention one other issue, 480p is the max on resolution, after that it buffers every 5 to 10 seconds for 5 to 10 seconds and this is during bonus time. I tried it again this morning at 2:30 am and videos were unwatchable above 480p.
- GabeU8 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
When you test your speed at testmy.net, please make sure to use the manual 4MB size for upload tests and the manual 25MB size for download tests. This will not only ensure that the tests last long enough, but it also helps to see differences when the same size test is used each time.
Also, in your particular case, it will help to conserve data when running the download tests. The 25MB file is not only an adequate size for the download tests, but it's also a file that doesn't forward to a larger size, so when your download speeds are very good you won't have to use a lot of data to know it. I see from your Results URL that, since February, your download tests are using a tremendous amount of data, and using the manual 25MB size for those download tests will prevent this. Data being as precious as it is, this should help to save you a good amount. :)
- dfbeck8 years agoJunior
GabeU
I used to set the download size manually when I used this quite some time ago but I simply forgot to do it until your reminder. When data was flowing flawlessly some time ago I had to be careful not to have it consumed with tests. I didn't really give it a thought this time since I can't download videos at a resolution higher than 480p. The consequense of that is having15 gigs available at the end of the month. Last month I had 19 left. Right now I have 53% available out of 50 gigs. Very wasteful. I ran Testmy.net last night and this morning it had used 6.8 gigs. Freaked me out until I remembered the test eats it up. I'm hoping I'll get back to having to conserve and I appreciate your suggestion.
I'm hoping that Amanda is going to discover the cause of the errors but I have a semi-unrelated question: when you open a Hughes page to either read email, check data usage, or even reach this page, does it take less than 45/55 seconds to load the password page and an additional 45/55 seconds after that? I had been leaving my email open but due to, I assume, slow response times I'm logged out constantly and logging back in a nearly a minute is frustrating. I just want to know if that is system wide or an issue here. Not the logging off, the time to load.
Appreciate the reminder.
- GabeU8 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
The HughesNet pages do tend to take a little longer for me than most pages, but nowhere near 45 seconds or so. Maybe fifteen seconds or so. Other pages, however, like you listed in a previous post, don't tend to take even that long. Like when I click on Youtube in my favorites it opens in less than ten seconds. Google and Twitter open even faster for me than Youtube.
It's entirely possible that the slow speed you're experiencing when opening those web pages is tied to the the state codes you're seeing. Hopefully the picture of the state codes will help Amanda in figuring out what's going on. That 12.1.9 in the pic is troubling.
BTW, if you're running automatic tests you can set it like in the picture below so that it uses the sizes mentioned. Make sure to tick the nfw box, which means "no forwarding", as in no forwarding the test size, or increasing the test size, when it doesn't last long enough. I put it for every half hour and 12 times, but you can put it for whatever frequency you'd like. It's "Combined", the aforementioned 25MB for download and 4MB for upload, and nfw checked. Using 25MB for each test instead over 100MB should help to save some of that data, even if you do have a lot left at the end of the month. You never know when you might need a lot of it. :)
- GabeU8 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
dfbeck wrote:I forgot to mention one other issue, 480p is the max on resolution, after that it buffers every 5 to 10 seconds for 5 to 10 seconds and this is during bonus time. I tried it again this morning at 2:30 am and videos were unwatchable above 480p.
I can't remember if this was ever mentioned, but when you want to watch something in a resolution higher than 480p you will most likely need to turn off, or snooze, your Video Data Saver. The VDS deliberately throttles the service speed when streaming to such that is amenable to 480p, but not higher resolutions. This is done to help save data, as streaming in HD can use up to 3GB or more per hour, vs. around 700MB per hour for SD (480p).
Hope this helps. :)
- dfbeck8 years agoJunior
GabeU
I have never use VDS. I had to look it up. There's only a couple of video pages that I would set at 720 since when this is working properly I can eat up 50 gigs with 5 days to go in the month. Sometime I'd like to see what 1080 looks like without the white spinning circle in the center of the picture but using the VDS is cool. Thanks for that.
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