What is the best way to troubleshoot slow internet speeds at night?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around troubleshooting slow internet speeds experienced at night. Participants explore potential causes, including bandwidth sharing, ISP performance, and specific activities that may affect perceived speed. The conversation includes technical explanations and personal experiences related to internet connectivity.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant notes a significant slowdown in internet speed at night, suggesting a program may be consuming bandwidth.
  • Another participant explains that cable internet users share bandwidth with others in their area, which could lead to slower speeds during peak usage times.
  • A different viewpoint suggests that the type of activity performed online at night could differ from daytime activities, potentially affecting speed perception.
  • One participant raises the possibility that slow loading times for web pages could be due to an overloaded ISP name server, while large file downloads may not be affected.
  • Another participant mentions that time zone differences could impact access speeds to certain websites.
  • A participant shares their experience with download speeds from a specific provider, discussing potential factors like caching and speed limits imposed by the ISP.
  • One user expresses a desire to understand the difference between antivirus software options, indicating a lack of technical knowledge compared to others in the discussion.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express various hypotheses about the causes of slow internet speeds, with no consensus reached on a single explanation. Multiple competing views remain regarding the factors influencing internet performance at night.

Contextual Notes

Some assumptions about the nature of internet connections and user activities are not fully explored, and the discussion does not resolve the technical complexities involved in diagnosing internet speed issues.

Who May Find This Useful

Individuals experiencing slow internet speeds, particularly during evening hours, as well as those interested in understanding the technical aspects of internet connectivity and troubleshooting methods.

888eddy
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what affects internet speed?

my internet slows down significantly at night. i have done a speed test which indicates its actually faster but everything i do on the internet after around 8pm takes over twice as long. I'm assuming its a program slowing the connection and using up the bandwidth but what program?
 
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What type of connection do you have? If you have cable you are sharing a pool of bandwith along with everyone else in your block( not a street block, but a block of customers to the isp). The after 8pm drop might indicate more people are on during this time.

Also what activity are you doing at 8pm that might be different then what you do earlier in the day. "everything i do on the internet" is vague.
 
By "slowness" do you mean having to wait for a page to come up when you click on a link, or do large files take longer to download, or both?

If it's the first but not the second, then the problem might be that your ISP's name server is overloaded in the evening. When you access a new page, your computer has to look up the numeric IP address that corresponds to a domain name like physicsforums.com, using your ISP's name server.

Where I work, the raw connection speed is much faster than at home, so I can download large files faster at work. However, at work it takes longer for pages to load, especially when it's a complicated page with images and other pieces from more than one server. I think my school's name server doesn't have as much "horsepower" as it really should have. The ISP that I use at home has more resources.
 
Another possibility is that the time zone difference between you and the sites you're accessing is great enough that it's daytime wherever they are.
 
cheers jtbell and CaptainQuasar. your probably both right. shame there's not much i can do about it except mabye change my isp.
 
It could be bandwidth issues at your end or an issue at the web sites you typically visit.

Try downloading something from Microsoft. I'm currently using Cox cable (Southern California), but there aren't many others nearby using cable modems, and although the stated download rate is 12 megabits per second, I've seen over 2 megabytes / second downloads from Microsoft, although Cox may be caching some of these (my last download was Virtual PC 2007 SP1 which wouldn't seem to be that popular), or there's some compression going on (2 megabytes would be 16 megabits per second), or Cox had yet again bumped up the speed (it's just a parameter in a cable modem set by the ISP via software commands). Note that Cox limits upload speed to about 10% of the download speed (to discourage people hosting servers).

If you're referring to lag in online gaming, it's the distance and number of nodes involved between you, the server, and/or other players. The time it takes for information to propagate isn't affected by bandwidth (if the information packets are relatively small). Satellites, being 22,000 miles up, add about 1/4 second of lag (22,000 miles x 2 / (186,000 miles / second), for each transfer of information.

The current limit for USA (DOCSIS 1.1 or 2.0) cable modems is 38.7 megabits / seconds download, 9 (DOCSIS 1.1) or 27 (DOCSIS 2.0) megabits / second upload. This would consume all of a 6 mhz channel on a cable. My cable modem supports 88mhz to 860mhz, being able to select 1 of up to 128 channels.
 
i am a newy in computers compare with you guys so i will like to ask you something
is nod antivirus better than spybot search and destroy?
 
jtbell said:
By "slowness" do you mean having to wait for a page to come up when you click on a link, or do large files take longer to download, or both?

If it's the first but not the second, then the problem might be that your ISP's name server is overloaded in the evening. When you access a new page, your computer has to look up the numeric IP address that corresponds to a domain name like physicsforums.com, using your ISP's name server.

Where I work, the raw connection speed is much faster than at home, so I can download large files faster at work. However, at work it takes longer for pages to load, especially when it's a complicated page with images and other pieces from more than one server. I think my school's name server doesn't have as much "horsepower" as it really should have. The ISP that I use at home has more resources.[/QUOTe

hi jtbell i am a newy in computers compare with you so i will like to ask you something
is nod antivirus better than spybot search and destroy?
 

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