RamiB wroteguys does anyone tested this comapny : Connect.net.lb wireless boardband service

they have a 2Mb and 5Mb plans that i am willing to try , but i am afraid the ping will be bad for games

there is no feedback or review for them so far , currently i have ifly 1Mbs plan and the ping sucks :(

regards
https://lebgeeks.com/forums/viewtopic.php?id=16288
This is the thread for Connect feedback
Doom wrote
RamiB wroteguys does anyone tested this comapny : Connect.net.lb wireless boardband service

they have a 2Mb and 5Mb plans that i am willing to try , but i am afraid the ping will be bad for games

there is no feedback or review for them so far , currently i have ifly 1Mbs plan and the ping sucks :(

regards
https://lebgeeks.com/forums/viewtopic.php?id=16288
This is the thread for Connect feedback
I have connect and i do not recommend it
thank you guys , that's what i expected , just advertising.
gaming online => DSL
a month later
Hi, how can I check the real ping and real packet loss of my internet connection?
I play an online game and the ping is so high with TONS of packet loss every couple of minutes, I'm 99% sure that the results on cmd are cached by my provider. Sometimes when the internet is down, I still can ping to bbc.co.uk or 8.8.8.8 and it gives me a perfect stable 50 ms
0% packet loss.
2 months later
Seems like more than half of the Lebanese are having problems since the illegal internet scandal. My ISP told me that he wanted to upgrade his bandwidth but most of the companies in Lebanon (Mobi, IDM, Terranet..) don't have enough "internet" since then. Even Ogero's internet has been bad the last few weeks.
Hopefully our government will make the right choice and fix things if not improve them.
The post mentions that ISPs were getting the "Google cache service" and passing it on to customers.
This makes zero sense. "Google Cache" is not a service provided by Google to ISPs. The only thing I can think of is how Google caches a page when its crawler indexes it and makes it accessible when you press the "cached" hyperlink next to a search result. Not sure how this relates to slow internet speeds.
ستقبل وزير الإتصالات بطرس حرب في مكتبه في الوزارة بعد ظهر اليوم تجمّع شركات الأنترنت الذي يضم حوالى 30 شركة ISP، جرى خلاله التداول في موضوع خدمة الأنترنت وتوزيعها ولا سيما بعد اكتشاف الوزارة فضيحة الأنترنت غير الشرعي واستجرار السعات الدولية من الخارج بشكل غير مرخص. وطالب أصحاب الشركات الوزير حرب العمل على إعادة تفعيل خدمة الغوغل كاش Google Cache التي كانت الشركات تحصل عليها من دون أي بدل، لا سيما وأنها انقطعت منذ حوالى أسبوع، الأمر الذي انعكس ضرراً على المشتركين لجهة انخفاض سرعة خدمة الأنترنت ونوعيتها.
samer wroteThe post mentions that ISPs were getting the "Google cache service" and passing it on to customers.
This makes zero sense. "Google Cache" is not a service provided by Google to ISPs. The only thing I can think of is how Google caches a page when its crawler indexes it and makes it accessible when you press the "cached" hyperlink next to a search result. Not sure how this relates to slow internet speeds.
I guess some ISPs were forwarding youtube requests to a local google cache server (something like a google cdn for youtube) which saves international bandwidth.
When this stopped, all requests were forwarded to parent google server in europe/us/whatever and this caused a congestion in the internet in Lebanon.
Ideally, there should be a google cache cdn, a cloudflare cdn node, etc... in Lebanon.
My download speeds have been around 700 KB/s non cached, But youtube sucks because it's being throttled by my ISP currently to save bandwidth after the google cache issue.
a month later
NuclearVision wrote
Perhaps i misunderstood, but 1 Mbps is around 10$ nowadays, this brings up to 2008!)) Did you consider the quota?
edit: i think i get it now, is it not costumer price?
what he means it the dedicated speed which is sold as E1 in lebanon ( E1=2Mbps and cost 250$)
so 1Mbps is 125$ ( although you can't buy it alone )
Silentcontrol wrote
NuclearVision wrote
Perhaps i misunderstood, but 1 Mbps is around 10$ nowadays, this brings up to 2008!)) Did you consider the quota?
edit: i think i get it now, is it not costumer price?
what he means it the dedicated speed which is sold as E1 in lebanon ( E1=2Mbps and cost 250$)
so 1Mbps is 125$ ( although you can't buy it alone )
Ah well thanks.
But as i understand, isps buy those from ogero.
Abroad, they buy it from the state? isn't there some kind of private infrastructure? How does it, in such case, compare?
Giving all details of Lebanese licensing and stuff probably will take several pages, i'm not ready for that. But i think Lebanon has one of most inefficient and outdated laws regarding telecom.
Most countries have private isps that anyone can buy from but they rarely sell E1 since it is really outdated they sell something can't recall the name but i know its a 150 Mbps and it costs on average 40$. Lebanon on the the other side is based on monopoly so only the government is allowed to provide Internet to the country that is why we have those high prices and bad connection : 1 there is no competition
2 do you know anything that the gouvernament runs that is not broken or corrupted ( electricity, trash,...)
155Mbps is STM1, noone use this terms this days, as E1, unless it is some old setup. It is synchronous channels suitable for "old style" telephony.
Everywhere in decent countries bandwidth sold by Mbps.
most of the world is on symmetrical fiber optics broadband connections and we still use the adsl standards....enough to explain our situation....we are veryyy far away from other countries

edit: i see that minister boutros harb didnt had enough to stop going forward... he ruined what nicolas sehnaoui started...
dav wrotemost of the world is on symmetrical fiber optics broadband connections and we still use the adsl standards....enough to explain our situation....we are veryyy far away from other countries

edit: i see that minister boutros harb didnt had enough to stop going forward... he ruined what nicolas sehnaoui started...
Very sad really. Yesterday Etisalat upgraded my Internet speed at home for free. 10Mbps to 20Mbps. Never had to complain about performance issues ever. Such a relief really.

Corruption in Lebanon, will it ever end?