Top 10: Reasons Your Internet Connection Sucks


By: Mike Gunn
Published: Saturday 30 Jun 2012 10:00 AM
 
Top 10: Reasons Your Internet Connection Sucks

What's with your internet connection? Why does it suck?

Stress is a fact of life in the modern age; there's no escaping it. If there is one thing that can still turn a gamer's blood to steam, however, it's when the internet drops out just as they are about to perform the perfect kill.

With that in mind, we're taking a look at the top 10 reasons for game related hypertension (other than exercise and a good diet – but this could be an internet myth) and offer some suggestions...

1. You have dial up


There are still an enormous number of people out there using dial up as their connection to the Internet, despite the fact that the price difference between this ancient connection type and an entry level broadband product is small. You are missing out on a feature-rich Internet experience for the sake of a few dollars a month. The world has moved on! Ditch the 56k modem (or forever be dead meat in multiplayer)!

2. Home wiring


A little known fact is that 40-60% of Internet problems relate to your home wiring. If your Internet-carrying cabling is running close to (and in parallel with) your electrical wiring, you are asking for the nasty electrical induction demon to appear in your network.

If that sounds like you, check to see if you have your cabling too close to your house wiring (warning: home electrical work is something you cannot safely learn about on the Internet! Don’t be an idiot, get a professional sparky in if you want to do anything electrical.)

3. The position of your modem


The world is full of badly insulated products. More so nowadays, as appliances and devices become cheaper. Placing your modem next to your dirt-cheap microwave means that, while cooking the standard gamer’s staple of pizza, snack time will likely also result in some epic latency and signal loss. We suggest you keep at least a meter between your modem and other devices. Alternatively wrap it (and yourself) in tin foil (added bonus is that the aliens will also lose control of your brain).

4. Burglar alarm / electric fences


Two devices that must be the bane of a lot of telephone techs. Pulses from electric fences and stay alive signals from monitored alarms can interrupt your Internet connection. With alarms especially, ensure they are correctly filtered if you're using ADSL to connect to the Internet (ADSL shares its connection to the world with your phone line, which your alarm probably uses too).

5. Where you live


We like to think we live in an egalitarian country. The fact is, however, the more remote you are, the harder it is for your broadband supplier to get a good quality signal to you. Yes, fibre offers some hope in this regard, but be realistic; if your property is 50 km down a remote rural road, how economical is it for the provider to deliver service to you? Does your $39 a month justify laying the 50 km of fibre to your home?

Investigate some of the wireless and satellite alternatives if you must live in the boondocks, and prepare for the Armageddon. Just don’t expect the same level of service that urban dwellers get. Here’s a tip: when buying or renting a house, talk to the locals and the estate agents to see what the Internet connection is like in the area before you buy.

Continue reading on page 2.





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SkinBintin
On Tuesday 3 Jul 2012 8:21 PM Posted by SkinBintin NZGamer.com VIP
Have been a long time TelstraClear Cable subscriber here in Christchurch since it's early days now, and have always been happy with it. However, now that Orcon has 1TB data packs and up to 100Mb/s connections in certain areas, and Snap! offer up to 560GB data caps with reasonable speeds on their VDSL2+ service, the data limitations are starting to irritate me.

Recently, I have been considering a switch away from TelstraClear to Snap!, but the cost to get my house tapped back in to Telecom's copper kept putting me off.

Anyway, last week I decided to just go ahead and do it. Just as I was about to call Snap!, TelstraClear called seemingly reading my mind and offer to move me from their 120GB 25Mb/s connection, to their 150GB 100Mb/s connection with virtually no increase in monthly cost. I took their offer.

Yesterday, the new cable modem was installed to take advantage of this new bandwidth, and they threw in a new gigabit router (as my old router was really struggling to stay alive as is, and the only thing keeping it somewhat functional was the DD-WRT firmware I flashed on to it a couple of months back). Wow! I love it.

Now, I have always found Telstra's cable plans to be really good. I get minimal lag at best when playing games on XboxLive with American or British hosts, much to the frustration of my friends that would join me and not have the same joy. But so far, the increase in speed is phenomenal. I'm really happy with this new plan! Now, the only hassle is the 150GB data cap. With bandwidth like this, I would love to start streaming HD movies via XboxLive etc, but with many creeping up to the 15GB mark, that 150GB won't stretch far.

Anyways, I guess what I'm trying to say is, for the most part I've been lucky not to encounter many of the problems most other kiwi denizen's of the world wide web complain about on a daily basis. NZ really needs to move in to the current age regarding internet connections, but having more access to high speed connections (50Mb/s and higher) and larger data caps, to really make use of all the internet has to offer (I'm talking about legal things here, not leeching to your hearts content on The Pirate Bay or Usenet or whatever).
 
 
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Riot Pig
On Thursday 5 Jul 2012 8:16 PM Posted by Riot Pig NZGamer.com VIP
There must be so many people still using an ADSL1 modem, yet they're in an ADSL2 zone.
 
 
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Leachy1983
On Saturday 7 Jul 2012 5:49 PM Posted by Leachy1983
And the number one reason your internet sucks... you live in NZ and our internet is crap slow compared to the rest of the world.
 
 
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