> > Your IP address should have no effect on your connection speed (i.e. > getting a new one won't help you any). You have to find out what's > causing your connection's throughput to be slow.
After changing IP, I don't need to wait a hellish time to open a webpage. At first I even suspected it's due to the updating of the gnutls, but later I realized this low-speed happened 8 hrs later after updating. > > Some possibilities: > > (LAN) > - Other things using the network (torrents, youtube, VoIP, etc) > - QoS limiting what you're trying to do (torrents, youtube) in favor > of something else (VoIP) > - Router can't cope with the above > - you've been hard-limited (on the router) to 10 mbit (or 100 mbit), > and you were on gbit. I don't use torrents, VoIP. I don't think I have some hard-limit. > > (WAN) > - ISP has over-sold the loop (generally cable) > - ISP has over-sold the backhaul (DSL, fiber) > - ISP fscked up your modem's provisioning, and you're on (e.g.) 10/1 > when you should be on 50/5 (etc.) Actually my wireless works well since it was allocated different ip at that time. > > Thanks, -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/5319d3e4.9040...@gmail.com