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Increase Internet Connection Bandwidth
Started by soleimanian, Aug 09 2007 09:04 AM
24 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 09 August 2007 - 09:04 AM
Increase your internet connection bandwidth
There is a feature in windows xp (Packet Scheduler) which take 20% of your internet connection band width. You can disable this feature.
1- Go to Start Menu > Run and then type "gpedit.msc" to run Group Policy.
2- Go to Local Computer Policy > Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates.
3- Under Administrative Templates, expand Network and then Qos Packet Scheduler.
4- In the right panel, right click on Limit reservable bandwidth and then select Properties.
5- In Limit reservable bandwidth Properties, click on Setting tab and then enable Limit reservable bandwidth.
6- Here you can change Bandwidth Limit from default (20) to 0.
7- Now , go to your Connection properties, select Networking and be sure Packet Scheduler is enabled . click ok and the restart your computer.
There is a feature in windows xp (Packet Scheduler) which take 20% of your internet connection band width. You can disable this feature.
1- Go to Start Menu > Run and then type "gpedit.msc" to run Group Policy.
2- Go to Local Computer Policy > Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates.
3- Under Administrative Templates, expand Network and then Qos Packet Scheduler.
4- In the right panel, right click on Limit reservable bandwidth and then select Properties.
5- In Limit reservable bandwidth Properties, click on Setting tab and then enable Limit reservable bandwidth.
6- Here you can change Bandwidth Limit from default (20) to 0.
7- Now , go to your Connection properties, select Networking and be sure Packet Scheduler is enabled . click ok and the restart your computer.
#4
Posted 09 August 2007 - 08:17 PM
I read somewhere that this only works in Windows XP Professional Edition but if you wanted to do it in Home Edition all you have to do is click Start > Run > Type in services.msc and then find the QOS service and disable it. I am not sure if this works, I read it and haven't tried it so be careful that you know how to bring it back. As for side effects to doing this, as far as I know mojoman there aren't any. http://www.dslreports.com/faq/3688 This link here says it only affects LAN traffic and not the internet itself. I would try it but I don't want to screw anything up plus I'm happy with what I have at the moment so I'll let the scheduler do it's job.
#6
Posted 22 August 2007 - 06:39 PM
okay.... that was only for windows community. but is there any way for increasing the bandwidth for Linux using community.
i am using internet facility through a LAN connected to a centralised web server.
is there any way to steal major amount of bandwidth to my computer? is there any software which could do this?
i am using internet facility through a LAN connected to a centralised web server.
is there any way to steal major amount of bandwidth to my computer? is there any software which could do this?
#7
Posted 22 August 2007 - 08:32 PM
Downsides of this is that if you are on a network and are transfering files and then also going online, it will not prioritize or distribute a certain percent of the bandwidth to each operation. Instead if will completely fill your connection with one or the other if your connection can not handle both streams based on their size and such.
#8
Posted 06 December 2007 - 06:17 AM
The post seemed to help me and my fiance quite a bit, we're still having problems with our net, but it's made it at least livable until we get the service tech out here. Nothing is really going to stop a 75% packet loss due to signal and other issues >.> btw I dislike Brighthouse Networks Road Runner cable internet with great intensity. But once again thank you for helping me and my fiance out, we were getting constant signal loss, and almost always disconnecting every few moments, but now we're able to stay on, slowly but better than unable to.
#10
Posted 23 November 2008 - 03:18 AM
NO BANDWIDTH RESERVED BY WINDOWSIncrease Internet Connection Bandwidth
WRONG! Windows does not reserve any bandwidth for any purpose. This myth has been circulating way to long. Where do prople get this rubish?
-feedback by ROBERT WILLIAMS
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