Protected by Copyscape DMCA Takedown Notice Infringement Search Tool
All opinions expressed on this blog are my own and do not reflect those of BIET Jhansi students and employees,staff,or any official whatsoever, colleagues, family or friends.I express my opinions as a free citizen of a democracy exercising my Fundamental Right of speech. The intention of this blog is merely to air my views and opinions (and sometimes, frustration) and is not intended to insult, instigate,disgrace or hurt anyone(body,organisation or institution). Anyone is free to disagree with any or all of my views and can express them here or elsewhere. Any civil dialogue that is not unreasonably hurtful is welcome. I, however, reserve the right to delete any comment without any reason or warning.No content of this blog will in any way be a violation UNDER IPC Sections 506 and 295A .Legal issues if any will be ristricted to the MEERUT jurisdiction only.This blog/web space is in the process of being copyrighted to safegaurd my interests erstwhile this be considered to be under the creative commons commercial INDIA License.This space resorts to politically and ethically correct statements, complying with the spirit of blogging .This is an opinion medium, not a reporting medium and hence should not be IN ANY CASE BE TAKEN AS A FUNCTION OF MAINSTREAM MEDIA.The blog complies with the NAAVI guidelines. Thank you, MANOJ SINGH RANA

Friday, October 9, 2009

How to improve your internat speed...?

Microsoft reserves 20% of your available bandwidth for their own purposes like Windows Updates and interrogating your PC etc. Don't you want to get it back for your self? Here is the trick how to get 100% of your available bandwidth.
Increase internet speed :ugeek:

To get it back:
Click Start then Run and type "gpedit.msc" without quotes.

This opens the "group policy editor" and go to: "Local Computer Policy"

Then "Computer Configuration" Then "Administrative Templates"

Then select "Network" then "QOS Packet Scheduler"

After that select "Limit Reservable Bandwidth".
Double click on Limit Reservable bandwidth. It will say it is not configured, but the truth is under the 'Explain' tab i.e." By default, the Packet Scheduler limits the system to 20 percent of the bandwidth of a connection, but you can use this setting to override the default."
So the trick is to ENABLE reservable bandwidth, then set it to ZERO. This will allow the system to reserve nothing, rather than the default 20

No comments:

Post a Comment

Comments Section