InterviewSolution
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Solve : Wireless network suddenly slow?? |
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Answer» So, my desktop computer (which has connectivity issues on and off; it's been about a year since my last bout), started being real slow on the internet. I'm getting ~30k/s average, with spikes of around 100k and 0.3k. I was messing around with Ubuntu a bit (still earning; great OS, but steep learning curve), and tried out the shutdown command. As expected, the computer shut down. I quickly started the computer again (< 5 sec after power down). When the system came back online, it was very reluctant to connect to my router, and painfully slow network speeds (slower than it is now). I have rebooted, shut down for 5 MIN, and tried the wireless in windows 7; same result every time. Interestingly, the wireless was far slower in windows than in Ubuntu (figured I screwed linux up somehow as I'm very prone to do). The connectivity problem went away after the computer initially connected to the router, quickly connecting to it after every reboot (except for after having rebooted the router itself; that took a bit longer than usual to reconnect). Check the PSU because his internet speeds are slow??? Yeah, duh, like he says, you check the obvious first. slow wireless network speeds are almost always caused by PSU issues! On that note, the "obvious" thing to check here is to see if the same problem occurs with a wired connection. If so, then it be the PSU, purposely sending the wrong amount of current to the specific network devices it wants to affect, somehow leaving RAM, CPU, and all the other devices completely untouched, which is impossible anyway since the VRM on the motherboard steps down the DC and routes it to the PCI devices. Or, it could be a hardware issue- or, given that Linux still has faster speeds, a software one. Of course, if the wired connection works perfectly fine, then it's probably zebras. then it's probably an issue with the wireless card hardware, signal, or it's antenna. Or, of course, the software (what drivers are you using on Windows and Linux?) My apologies...I posted in the wrong thread No I didn't, this is the right thread ....getting kinda late I guess. Did any of you guys read the second thread? The part where he disconnects the monitor and Presto! he's back up to speed! No clues there?Quote from: Allan on June 07, 2010, 10:05:05 AM Check the PSU because his internet speeds are slow???Good Point! Those PUS testers ... NEVER... check for Zebras. Quote from: Sodde on June 07, 2010, 08:17:39 PM No I didn't, this is the right thread ....getting kinda late I guess.I cannnot find anything said that fits that description. Seems to me that the other thread says it only works when both monitors are connected: Quote Short version; I have two monitors, and when both of them are on, I have no problems with the network, but if I deactivate the second monitor in the system, I can barely maintain a connection with my wireless router. Considering that... Does it exhibit the same behaviour in Ubuntu?Rapid_Dissent says > "So, just to humor myself, I decided to test and see if it was the same problem as last year (PSU dying on me), and sure enough, as soon as I disabled the second monitor, the internet sprung right back to life as though nothing had ever been wrong". Did you read this part?Quote from: Sodde on June 08, 2010, 05:35:07 AM Rapid_Dissent says > "So, just to humor myself, I decided to test and see if it was the same problem as last year (PSU dying on me), and sure enough, as soon as I disabled the second monitor, the internet sprung right back to life as though nothing had ever been wrong". ahh, I remembered that part but couldn't see it when I skimmed over it again. How is the second monitor being disabled?Disabling the monitor has absolutely no effect on power supply performance. Quote from: Rapid_Dissent on May 27, 2010, 08:47:02 PM So, just to humor myself, I decided to test and see if it was the same problem as last year (PSU dying on me), and sure enough, as soon as I disabled the second monitor, the internet sprung right back to life as though nothing had ever been wrong. Quote from: Geek-9pm on June 08, 2010, 08:26:03 AM Disabling the monitor has absolutely no effect on power supply performance. I, too, fail to see the relationship between the power supply, the monitor, and the speed of his internet.Back on topic. He needs to run a wire directly from the router to his desktop. Or buy a new PCI wireless card. It sounds like the antenna is broke. http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=5684865&CatId=2688 |
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