MWEB Uncapped Subscribers Feedback

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Strangely for some reason I am back to full line speed again this morning after almost a month of shaped http and complaining in here - touch wood.
YouTube is streaming full line speed where yesterday it would sit at 20kB/s.
Ubuntu download as well, full speed. Yesterday was also about 20kB/s.
It's wonderful not to see any more spiking.

Not holding my breath though but MWEB what ever you did don't change it.

I am in Cape Town
 
I've been having such bad performance gaming with my mweb 4mbit uncapped account for just over a week now, World Of Warcraft & Starcraft II (1000ms+ ping going through Lowerping, wtfast and other proxy service's)

I've had to ditch my uncapped account and switch over to Axxess prepaid accounts untill such time mweb sort the problem out. You can not play with these issues with the games said. (210ms with the said Axxess account)

What is going on? Give us some info and an eta on the resolved problem, please :mad:
 
vaalpens, they don't care about us. they only want your money, and will skirt the issue ad infinitum to keep you on for as long as possible. The spin doctors are quiet because they know that it's true, they know that they are throttling us between 8am and midnight. they are pulling us over a barrel and raping us!!! Cancel your account!

part of me still wants to work with them and resolve this issue :( 10+ isp's in one year isnt fun
 
maybe if enough people contact mr Rpm we might see some action?
my voice alone doesnt carry enough weight for anyone to care

*if mweb just admits something is wrong then i'll back down a bit
 
Ok now that the best ISP for 4mbps uncapped shaped has gone down the drain what are my options? I need a 4mbps account for work and home that can do at least 50 to 150GB a month without going into a 10 day rolling thing.

Look, I've moaned my gat off about MWEB but in terms of volume of data I've had no problems at all. Since January, I've had an average usage of 138.86 GB. For that usage, you'll have no issues; unless you want 50GB in a single day?

However my browsing experience is concerning. Latency is bouncing all over the show, the DNS is fonging out and responsiveness is less than I was used to before uncapped.
 
Look, I've moaned my gat off about MWEB but in terms of volume of data I've had no problems at all. Since January, I've had an average usage of 138.86 GB. For that usage, you'll have no issues; unless you want 50GB in a single day?

However my browsing experience is concerning. Latency is bouncing all over the show, the DNS is fonging out and responsiveness is less than I was used to before uncapped.

Yes agree there, ile just wait it out and see what happens. :)
 
aaaanyhow, as long as they are taking notice of the issue ill hold out, time to chill a bit, hehe, too much forum flaming isnt healthy

any volunteers to bring some redbulls etc for the guys who are working on the issue through the night ? :P
 
MWEB's Traffic "Shaping" Visualised

Like most people here that are religiously following this thread in the hope of getting some answers, I have spent the last few days running tests of my own at home to try and get a better understanding of what is happening to my MWEB bandwidth. One of these tests is to graph my traffic so that I can get a visual picture of what's going on over time. Something I had noticed previously was that I was being limited per connection as opposed to my total throughput, and this meant that my first attempt at graphing was skewed when my download manager, by default, used multiple threads. For example, I had noticed that during the day (and this applied to every international URL I tried), I would be getting about 256kbps (30KB/sec) per thread. If I used 4 threads, I would get 4 x 256kbps total throughput. I wanted to show this phenomenon over time on a graph, so I decided to create a large file on my webserver in Europe and download it using a single threaded HTTP connection overnight... The results can be seen below, so lets take a look and see what conclusions we can draw from it.

daily.gif


* 17h00: I begin the download. In realtime on the download manager, I'm seeing fluctuation between 20KB/sec and 40KB/sec, but the 5-minute average you see here shows the true speed of about 30KB/sec (256kbps).
* 22h00: Here we start to see the first signs of change as the download gains momentum, peaking at just below 1mbps at midnight, but then strangely dropping off to 512kbps again.
* 01h00: What have we here?! Suddenly the taps are open and I'm getting full speed! I say "full speed" because remember, this is only a single connection and even in a perfect world, one generally doesn't see a single connection to an international server achieve > 3mbps (unless it has been transparently cached locally of course).
* 08h00: Bandwidth throttling comes down like a hammer and within an hour I am limited to 256kbps once again.

Conclusions:
1.) What this graph shows beyond a shadow of doubt is that I am subject to hard-throttling per connection. This is *not* mere traffic-shaping, rather these are hard-and-fast rules that have been put in place at some point along the way.
2.) If the Technical Manager at MWEB doesn't know about these limitations that are obviously active, then they have a serious problem with internal communication. However, it is far more likely that he DOES know about it, but for whatever reason, he cannot come right out and tell us about it. This is probably the most frustarting part about all of this... It should not fall to customers like myself to have to do investigations like this in order for us to get the full picture. If we are being throttled based on time of day, then we have a right to know about it, and clearly, *SOMEONE* at MWEB has put in this limit.

My Theory:
Something I haven't mentioned yet is that I have two friends with MWEB accounts in the Durban area who are experiencing the same problems. However, and this is especially perplexing, two other friends in Cape Town are having NO SUCH ISSUES. At any time in the day, they are seeing single connection speeds of > 200KB/sec. Its worth noting that they have similar usage on their accounts too, so it would appear that the throttling isn't based on bandwidth usage, but rather geographical location and / or the route that the traffic takes to get to its destination. Quite likely, my Cape Town friends' traffic is travelling by different backbone provider compared to mine, and therefore subject to different bandwidth management. Again though, MWEB should know this; we shouldn't have to tell them.

When I find some time to log a fault with Telkom, I will submit the support document that has been posted here recently. It will of course prove less useful than the information I have provided above, because as we all know by now, local traffic is 100% so MWEB speed tests will reveal nothing, and simply dialling up with an alternative ISP validates that the line is not to blame.

Either way, I hope that this information proves useful. My next test will be to dial up with one of my Cape Town friends' accounts to rule out (or confirm) the theory that it is only a block of accounts that is affected.

Hi StNick,

We do not throttle. We appreciate the tests you've been running.

Will and our network administrators is busy with full a investigation on all the speed issues mentioned in the thread. Soon as they have completed the investigation, we will provide everyone feedback.

Kind regards,

MWEB Guy
 
Hi StNick,

We do not throttle. We appreciate the tests you've been running.

Will and our network administrators is busy with full a investigation on all the speed issues mentioned in the thread. Soon as they have completed the investigation, we will provide everyone feedback.

Kind regards,

MWEB Guy

That is lol of the day! :D
 
Hi StNick,

We do not throttle. We appreciate the tests you've been running.

Will and our network administrators is busy with full a investigation on all the speed issues mentioned in the thread. Soon as they have completed the investigation, we will provide everyone feedback.

Kind regards,

MWEB Guy

Uhh, why the common denominator of 30-34Kb/s all of a sudden ?
Unless Telkom decided to make us all 384 users, or you are throttling us back to a halt, i have no better explanation than this.
Provide me with a reasonable answer as to why we all seem to be experiencing the same symptom - widely spread around the country - with the same services experiencing the same speeds ?
I am not in control of that unfortunately - you are, or Telkom is.
 
Strangely for some reason I am back to full line speed again this morning after almost a month of shaped http and complaining in here - touch wood.
YouTube is streaming full line speed where yesterday it would sit at 20kB/s.
Ubuntu download as well, full speed. Yesterday was also about 20kB/s.
It's wonderful not to see any more spiking.

Not holding my breath though but MWEB what ever you did don't change it.

I am in Cape Town

I had the same experience, but an hour or 2 ago BAM, it's gone to ****e again.
 
I'm getting 15KB/s trying to download a patch for League of Legends. What the hell Mweb?

Not to mention the average of 350ms ping (with bad lag spikes) when I try play the game.

The ping used to be fine at about 250ms, but ever since this problem has been affecting me (started on Monday) my pings have been super high.
 
Hi StNick,

We do not throttle. We appreciate the tests you've been running.

Will and our network administrators is busy with full a investigation on all the speed issues mentioned in the thread. Soon as they have completed the investigation, we will provide everyone feedback.

Kind regards,

MWEB Guy

lol
you mean you dont shape mweb customers
 
If you don't throttle why am I getting 13KB/s at 16:18

My first log to Mweb was on the 16th of May its now the 25th and this still hasn't be resolved.

WTF is going on? you sure as **** will want your money at the end of the month with no questions asked.

Poor buggers that get this for six months with no choice but to pay.
 
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lol
you mean you dont shape mweb customers

Hi ForSure

MWEB does not have any ADSL products that utilize throttling. We offer shaped products that give high priority to the most commonly used internet services.

Kind regards
MWEB Guy
 
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