Colin Colenso said:Try speeding up your connection with this free software:
Whether you use a modem or broadband, you'll get a faster connection if you tweak your connection's TCP parameters. Among the most important of these is MaxMTU which, in simple terms, needs to be set to the largest value possible without your data being broken up into smaller chunks en-route. Most techies determine MaxMTU by trial and error pinging using different packet sizes but it's a tedious procedure and definitely not for beginners. TCPOptimizer from SpeedGuide.net is a free utility that will do the job for you automatically. Furthermore, it will use this value to advise you on your other TCP settings and then apply these values at the press of the button. There are commercial programs that will do much the same thing but TCPOptimizer does it just as well and is totally free. The only minus is the lack of in-program help. However you'll find a useful FAQ at the SpeedGuide site. (225KB)
http://www.speedguide.net/downloads.php
http://www.speedguide.net/faq_in.php?category=100
mjantti said:The congestion isn't located at viewers connection, it's in the web server which obviously has restrictions. More people watching, less bandwidth to offer. I think the web server has been configurated in a way that some people will get a good quality with decent framerate and the rest will share the narrow bandwidth which doesn't leave much quality to the stream. That's why some people are able to watch it nice and smooth and some people are suffering from constant buffering and other difficulties.
Nostroke said:I d/l'd it, ran it, Optimized my settings and there is absolutely no difference in the streaming. Now i have more useless crap cluttering up my HD. Don't anyone get their hopes up with this thing but thanks for trying Colin.
DaveK said:My advice is to uninstall the app. TCP/IP stacks take care of most of this stuff automatically, especially in more modern versions of Windows and for always in Unix. This is because the optimal settings can change depending on where you connect (WPC vs Google vs Some-Russion-Filesharesite).
Dave
karambolista said:Does anyone know how to record video streaming?
DaveK said:I agree, none of the performance issues are related to individual Internet subscriber lines (other than possibly the source server).
It's a darned shame that all of the Internet carriers don't support Multicast ... it fixes these problems nicely ... maybe in a few years it will be more common ... it better be if people want reasonable video broaadcasts over the Internet.
I recall the Director of IT at the Jet Propulsion Lab give a keynote address at a dinner where he said (my paraphrasing) 'we'll never put real-time data streams on ethernet / IP networks'. The issues people have with the WPC are why he said that. It's a round peg in a square hole today.
Dave