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You are Aggressive this early on a Saturday morning.

I can see it is a capped account and it is home capped. How difficult was that? No need to be a d!ck about it.

No aggression intended. Soz.
 
You must be on Tapatalk. Connection is in my sig: CW 425GB on 100Mbit Telkom FTTH.

Interesting that even sub-1MB/s connections get throttled though.

If CW is paying someone for a premium news service you'd think they can get them on the phone and tell them to cut the crap.

Or maybe he's turned off seeing signatures, like I have.
 
Is anyone using CW with ntv.mx - would like to know if you're experience buffering with the HD channels?

With Vox 50mbps connection currently and buffers all the time.
 
Is anyone using CW with ntv.mx - would like to know if you're experience buffering with the HD channels?

With Vox 50mbps connection currently and buffers all the time.

I use it, and I get buffering on HD, but I only have 4 Mb/s. Gonna assume on 10 meg it will be all good.
 
Lets be accurate guys, we are all techies after all.

This thread is full of references to "data speeds" ( a term I have always had problems with), but as it is generally used, let's leave that for another debate.


The correct abbreviation use is "kilo" with a small caps "k", and Mega with a Large Caps "M".
The correct abbreviation for data rates/speeds, is kilobit per second (kbps or kb/s).
The correct abbreviation for data rates/speeds is Megabit per second (Mbps or Mb/s).

We are supposed to use "Bytes" when trying to convey volume of data transfered per second, which is the Bytes per second (Bps or B/s; kiloBytes per second (kBps or kB/s); MegaBytes per second ()MBps or MB/s).

Note there are 8 "bits" in a "Byte" which makes a significant difference when talking about these concepts.
 
This thread is full of references to "data speeds" ( a term I have always had problems with), but as it is generally used, let's leave that for another debate.


The correct abbreviation use is "kilo" with a small caps "k", and Mega with a Large Caps "M".
The correct abbreviation for data rates/speeds, is kilobit per second (kbps or kb/s).
The correct abbreviation for data rates/speeds is Megabit per second (Mbps or Mb/s).

We are supposed to use "Bytes" when trying to convey volume of data transfered per second, which is the Bytes per second (Bps or B/s; kiloBytes per second (kBps or kB/s); MegaBytes per second ()MBps or MB/s).

Note there are 8 "bits" in a "Byte" which makes a significant difference when talking about these concepts.
Hear hear
 
This thread is full of references to "data speeds" ( a term I have always had problems with), but as it is generally used, let's leave that for another debate.


The correct abbreviation use is "kilo" with a small caps "k", and Mega with a Large Caps "M".
The correct abbreviation for data rates/speeds, is kilobit per second (kbps or kb/s).
The correct abbreviation for data rates/speeds is Megabit per second (Mbps or Mb/s).

We are supposed to use "Bytes" when trying to convey volume of data transfered per second, which is the Bytes per second (Bps or B/s; kiloBytes per second (kBps or kB/s); MegaBytes per second ()MBps or MB/s).

Note there are 8 "bits" in a "Byte" which makes a significant difference when talking about these concepts.

Seems there is disagreement as to k vs K for kilo. Imo k is correct for 1,000 and K for 1,024, so I use Kbps for example. The rest I agree with.
 
This thread is full of references to "data speeds" ( a term I have always had problems with), but as it is generally used, let's leave that for another debate.


The correct abbreviation use is "kilo" with a small caps "k", and Mega with a Large Caps "M".
The correct abbreviation for data rates/speeds, is kilobit per second (kbps or kb/s).
The correct abbreviation for data rates/speeds is Megabit per second (Mbps or Mb/s).

We are supposed to use "Bytes" when trying to convey volume of data transfered per second, which is the Bytes per second (Bps or B/s; kiloBytes per second (kBps or kB/s); MegaBytes per second ()MBps or MB/s).

Note there are 8 "bits" in a "Byte" which makes a significant difference when talking about these concepts.

I don't think it's an issue. It's not often I see someone get their data rates mixed up.
 
Just added my backup nextgennews account and my nzb speed shot back up to full speed. Funny as I thought the premium CW news server was from nextgennews anyway unless I'm mistaken :)
 
This thread is full of references to "data speeds" ( a term I have always had problems with), but as it is generally used, let's leave that for another debate.

The correct abbreviation use is "kilo" with a small caps "k", and Mega with a Large Caps "M".
The correct abbreviation for data rates/speeds, is kilobit per second (kbps or kb/s).
The correct abbreviation for data rates/speeds is Megabit per second (Mbps or Mb/s).

We are supposed to use "Bytes" when trying to convey volume of data transfered per second, which is the Bytes per second (Bps or B/s; kiloBytes per second (kBps or kB/s); MegaBytes per second ()MBps or MB/s).

Note there are 8 "bits" in a "Byte" which makes a significant difference when talking about these concepts.

It's just easier to do what some companies like Gigabyte, Intel, and Samsung are doing.

Gigabyte = GiB
Gigabit = Gb
 
A little off the topic.

@DJ... Any thoughts on plans in the future to host game servers locally? Just a comment I read on the MyGaming article. Got me wondering if this was something you are thinking about in the years to come?
 
A little off the topic.

@DJ... Any thoughts on plans in the future to host game servers locally? Just a comment I read on the MyGaming article. Got me wondering if this was something you are thinking about in the years to come?
Good question..

Please host a Battlefield 1 server.
 
IPC Cuts - Hi DJ, what response can we expect from CW regarding the IPC cuts on 1 June?
 
If files fail to download on Crystal Webs news server, is that the file or server?
 
IPC Cuts - Hi DJ, what response can we expect from CW regarding the IPC cuts on 1 June?

It will be nice to get something back, but if it is invested back into the network it is also a good option.

I would rather have a better internet experience than paying cheaper for a service that is not usable...my 2c.:D
 
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