Re: preferring a faster local network connection in XP
- From: Justin Brown - SYNACS <jcbrown@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 27 Sep 2007 13:42:10 -0000
On Sep 26, 11:08 pm, "VanguardLH" <Vanguar...@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Justin Brown - SYNACS" wrote ...
I have this problem where Windows prefers to use the wireless
network
I'm connected to, even if I've got my 10/100 network cable plugged
in.
Don't get me wrong, I am glad the wireless works. However I do not
want to use an access point that is shared with other users (and
quite
possibly saturated with regard to throughput) when I've got a
100Mbps
wired connection.
Is there any way that you guys know of to make Windows prefer using
the faster of its available connections? I supposed that if I was on
a
Gigabit link, with my 54Mbps wireless link concurrently, it would
still choose the wireless, which is wrong on so many levels.
How is using a preferred and faster router in your intranetwork going
to magically make your cable/dsl modem any faster? The same users
that are choking your Internet access with their bandwidth will still
be choking it regarding of which router/switch/accesspoint you use in
your intranetwork. They all go through the same cable/dsl modem.
Your pipe to your ISP doesn't get any bigger because you use a faster
internal device.
Just how big do you think is your pipe to your ISP? Your pipe to them
is 10Mbps, or less. Even an old NIC that only supported 10Mbps would
be more than the bandwidth available through your cable/dsl modem.
Even if you were lucky to have a 20Mbps pipe to your ISP, your NICs at
100Mbps are oversized and so, too, is your 54Mbps wireless access
point.
Doesn't matter how wide are the doors inside the building. There is
only one narrow entry/exit door for the whole building so everyone has
to squeeze through it. Your devices are faster than the throttling of
your cable/dsl modem. 10Mbps, 54Mbps, 100Mbps, or 1000Mbps: they're
all going through the same pipe to your ISP (which is probably capped
somewhere [far] below 20Mbps).- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
The speed of our uplink is not the issue here. I am not saturating
that particular link, but rather my Wifi link.
.
- References:
- preferring a faster local network connection in XP
- From: Justin Brown - SYNACS
- Re: preferring a faster local network connection in XP
- From: VanguardLH
- preferring a faster local network connection in XP
- Prev by Date: Re: preferring a faster local network connection in XP
- Next by Date: Re: preferring a faster local network connection in XP
- Previous by thread: Re: preferring a faster local network connection in XP
- Next by thread: Re: Great deals on Laptop computers
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|
|