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 TSI Gabe Premium,VIP join:2007-01-03 Chatham, ON
| Re: How much Bell's throttling affects our network and others the colored flow traffics are actually stacked. In other words UDP uses the most traffic, then Web, then P2P.
So there is more Web traffic on our network then P2P. Yet as you can see from the graphs, Bell does not only throttle P2P. It's affecting everything else. -- TSI Gabe - TekSavvy Solutions Inc. | |
|   twizlar I dont think so. Premium join:2003-12-24 Brantford, ON
| Re: How much Bell's throttling affects our network and others said by TSI Gabe :the colored flow traffics are actually stacked. In other words UDP uses the most traffic, then Web, then P2P. So there is more Web traffic on our network then P2P. Yet as you can see from the graphs, Bell does not only throttle P2P. It's affecting everything else. Yeah thats what amazed me, everything is pretty much being modified, hence all the traffic spikes. Scary. -- Intel Q6600 | 8800GTX | Ipods suck | |
|  |  Name96
join:2008-03-28
| Re: How much Bell's throttling affects our network and others said by twizlar :Yeah thats what amazed me, everything is pretty much being modified, hence all the traffic spikes. Scary. No, the traffic spikes are because the 'yesterday' graph has a different scale. The larger scale of the 'week ago' graph makes spikes less visible.
Note the peak traffic throughput a week ago was a pixel over 160Mbps while peak throughput yesterday was a little over 50Mbps. If these graphs are accurate, Bell has cut Teksavvy's traffic to about a third of its former volume even outside of the hours where P2P and encrypted traffic is degraded.
I question the accuracy of the traffic flow graphs, however. Slicing everything by two thirds 24/7 would have been noticed by everyone. | |
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