 | bypassing torrent throttling? Allo, I have finally bitten the lazy bullet and canceled my service with PathComm. I could live with the prime time throttling of torrents but the daily interruptions and slow HTTP traffic was a pain.
Now, moving over to TekSavvy, I could have sworn I saw a sticky post about suggested router/modems and method of bypassing the usual throttling. Was I nuts? Was it on another popular DSL forum? I remember it had a post by a TekSavvy employee with a list of suggested modems and the method to bypass throttling.
I did browse all three pages of headers and didn't see it. Anyone care to point me in the right direction?
TBIT  |
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 l0thar join:2005-12-29 Far Far Away kudos:1 | hi, TBIT, welcome to TSI.
There are different ways to do mlppp. Any decent dsl modem will work, popular models here include the Speedtouch 516 or 546 series, as well as the cheaper TP-Link clones. 2Wire refurbished modems can be had as well, and personally I believe are the best for long lines with higher attenuations.
To get an mlppp connection you will need to use one of these options :
- a dedicated router, a popular model being the Linksys WRT54GL, with a custom Tomato/mlppp firmware.
- or running VirtualBox and the Zeroshell linux package on it, this runs in your windows machine.
- or running Window's own multilink ppp capability, although you must make sure a decent firewall is protecting your system in this case.
The router option is a low cost and effective solution, which can provide mlppp for your whole home network at once. Spend the $60 or less for the router, install the firmware and you are done. |
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 | reply to TBIT try searching the forums
this has been discussed to death.
you will find all the information you need and more !  |
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 El Quintron... a faint odor of kerosenePremium join:2008-04-28 Etobicoke, ON kudos:2 Reviews:
·TekSavvy DSL
·voip.ms
·WIND Mobile
·TekSavvy Cable
| reply to TBIT As of July 1, you will also have to notify TSI that you want to do this, and they will provide you with a dedicate login to acheive this.
So to recap:
-Get TSI internet.
-Inform TSI you want MLPPP access, which they will provide you with a dedicated login.
-Setup up single or mulit-line MLPPP through windows, WRT54GL, ASUS WL500 G series, or virtual box models discussed above.
Reclaim your internet! -- Working to bring you closer to a Bell and Rogers free household. |
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 | reply to TBIT Thankyou all; you are gentlemen and scholars! |
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 Shada join:2007-03-09 Stratford, ON | reply to TBIT no matter which method of Mlppp you go with I am sure you will be happy with the results. |
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 DavesnothereNo-BHELL-ity DOES have its Advantages join:2009-06-15 START&Cogeco kudos:6 3 edits | . At least until the evil overlord BELL chooses and implements a way to selectively throttle the MLPPP users here and at a few other DSL ISPs who share part of their network, as does TSI.
AFAIK, Bell of course does not offer MLPPP to their direct subscribers such as Sympatico customers.
MLPPP itself was originally intended for combining two or more DSL enabled phone lines into one FAT FAST virtual line.
The throttle beating effect was just a bonus, and TSI themselves will admit that things could change.
After all, this IS Bell we're talking about....
BTW, does TBIT stand for Tim Bit ? (inside joke here)  |
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 | So, what is it intended for now then? |
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 | said by bbiab:So, what is it intended for now then? Re-read the following part of the message to which you responded:
said by Davesnothere:. MLPPP itself was originally intended for combining two or more DSL enabled phone lines into one FAT FAST virtual line. |
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 l0thar join:2005-12-29 Far Far Away kudos:1 | reply to Davesnothere Dave, you are right on.
Bell could develop the sniffing capability to identify p2p traffic headers inside a mlppp stream. Then their fscked DPI machines could do their lame and obscene manipulation in the data to slow it down, like they do to regular ppp connections.
It's unfortunate that BCE has chosen this path of minimizing investment, drop customer and technical support to the bare minimum, and generally nickel and dime their customers (including us, third party wholesaler dsl clients).
I would bet they HATE the idea of bonding two or more lines together (without even mlppp involved) - that allows people to get 10 to 12 Mb/s synch, 1.6 Mb/s upload, and a 400 GB a month or larger monthly bandwidth, depending on who they got their service from.
This at a much lower cost, with much less restrictions than Bell's own ADSL+ 10 Mb/s or higher services. |
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 | reply to TBIT Looks like the throttle is off in my area tonight, I'm averaging over 300 kB/s without MLPPP. |
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