loose it?
Also:
I've tried the speed tests using the site: testmy.net using the 12M download and I get anywhere from 40M to 50M which should be very good. Yet it seems to take a while for a site to come up compared to when I was on dsl with Century Link. Is this just the nature of the beast (latency issue)?
My LAN has 3 Linux boxes running Ubuntu 16.04 and a Windows 7 box going to a 24 port switch. I tried the download test with the main workstation plugged directly into the modem and then threw the switch as normal. That doesn't seem to make a difference in the test. I mostly use youtube-dl to download youtube videos and it seems real slow too. I think it may be because I need to download bigger chunks at a time using the download options:
-r, --limit-rate RATE Maximum download rate in bytes per second (e.g. 50K or 4.2M) -R, --retries RETRIES Number of retries (default is 10), or "infinite". --fragment-retries RETRIES Number of retries for a fragment (default is 10), or "infinite" (DASH, hlsnative and ISM) --skip-unavailable-fragments Skip unavailable fragments (DASH, hlsnative and ISM) --abort-on-unavailable-fragment Abort downloading when some fragment is not available --keep-fragments Keep downloaded fragments on disk after downloading is finished; fragments are erased by default --buffer-size SIZE Size of download buffer (e.g. 1024 or 16K) (default is 1024) --no-resize-buffer Do not automatically adjust the buffer size. By default, the buffer size is automatically resized from an initial value of SIZE. --playlist-reverse Download playlist videos in reverse order --playlist-random Download playlist videos in random order --xattr-set-filesize Set file xattribute ytdl.filesize with expected file size (experimental) --hls-prefer-native Use the native HLS downloader instead of ffmpeg --hls-prefer-ffmpeg Use ffmpeg instead of the native HLS downloader --hls-use-mpegts Use the mpegts container for HLS videos, allowing to play the video while downloading (some players may not be able to play it) --external-downloader COMMAND Use the specified external downloader. Currently supports aria2c,avconv,axel,curl,ffmpeg,httpie,wget --external-downloader-args ARGS Give these arguments to the external downloader
I'll experiment with it and let you know what I find out...
Solved! Go to Solution.
Was this your 1 month with Hughesnet? If so then your data reset for a few days. So it was like you didn't use any data for 20 days, I believe it is, if you have Gen 5. Yes you will loose what data you don't use. But make sure to keep a eye on it next month.
Was this your 1 month with Hughesnet? If so then your data reset for a few days. So it was like you didn't use any data for 20 days, I believe it is, if you have Gen 5. Yes you will loose what data you don't use. But make sure to keep a eye on it next month.
"I've tried the speed tests using the site: testmy.net using the 12M download and I get anywhere from 40M to 50M which should be very good. Yet it seems to take a while for a site to come up compared to when I was on dsl with Century Link. Is this just the nature of the beast (latency issue)?"
I experience the same issue -- my speed tests are OK (quite good today before 8 am, then back to my average of about 17). Browsing seems sluggish compared to when I had Gen 4 and the measured speeds were slower. Weird.
Just for future reference, when testing your download speed at testmy.net you should use the 25MB test size. The 12MB test size is for users with Gen4, whereas Gen5 users should utilize the 25MB test size.