I think were generalizing here

Im pretty sure that Ogero will FUP the abusers (even though it will be unlimited FREE night)

That being said, Ogero, why am i still on 256kbit connection; ive nagged on twitter to Sehnaoui about it, managed to get a reply, replied back but nothing, so now ive just passed all my research onto Ontornet; i hope they come up with some solution to these areas, or at least some compensation (im not asking for the impossible to happen, but it isn't fair that others enjoy the faster speeds and i don't at the same price)
babum wroteAlso, as you may have read many comments of people saying that they will switch to Ogero if it happens. They will also be using the internet during the day, straining the current capacity of the system.
You have a point. Let's hope this doesn't happen... or we can, kiss online gaming goodbye as xterm said.
Well I think it is going to be like that in the short term, lower speeds and very bad connection. But once Ogero settles down and increases capacity things will go back to normal.
The funny thing is that Ogero's connection has been bad for the past 2 months or so.
I get extremely low download speeds at night and speetest's page doesn't even load... and the unlimited night traffic is not even on yet.
If you're interested you could do like me :)

in lebanon we have ogero, and independent Isp right?

I don't use ogero, even if ogero gives you a very fast internet connection, it give 4 gb bandwidth per month, you know what lets assume it is 10 gb, not enough for me, it's enough if you just use facebook and these stuff, i waste 2gb of bandwidth per day lol,, coz i keep downloading and uploading stuff lol

what i did is go with an independent isp, which give a "good" speed, with 2 gb of bandwidth per day, and to boost my internet speed i use google dns, (you could use opendns, in my case google dns is better, it depends on your location)

and now i can fully load a 30m youtube video in 1m or less i have an internet speed about 5mb/s... you may say not as fast as ogero... i say i don't have to worry about my bandwidth
someone wroteIf you're interested you could do like me :)

in lebanon we have ogero, and independent Isp right?

I don't use ogero, even if ogero gives you a very fast internet connection, it give 4 gb bandwidth per month, you know what lets assume it is 10 gb, not enough for me, it's enough if you just use facebook and these stuff, i waste 2gb of bandwidth per day lol,, coz i keep downloading and uploading stuff lol

what i did is go with an independent isp, which give a "good" speed, with 2 gb of bandwidth per day, and to boost my internet speed i use google dns, (you could use opendns, in my case google dns is better, it depends on your location)

and now i can fully load a 30m youtube video in 1m or less i have an internet speed about 5mb/s... you may say not as fast as ogero... i say i don't have to worry about my bandwidth
I didn't understand what you did there. May you explain more clearly please?
I didn't understand what you did there. May you explain more clearly please?
I went with an independent isp, which gives you 2b of bandwith per day, but it is not as fast as ogero. there are a lot of independent isp companies

and i use google dns, instead of the default dns that i have, to boost the speed

https://developers.google.com/speed/public-dns/docs/using

please note that i am paying 45$
independent as in local guy?
@babum well yes, but there are companies like fastnet and others
someone wroteand i use google dns, instead of the default dns that i have, to boost the speed

https://developers.google.com/speed/public-dns/docs/using

please note that i am paying 45$
Doesn't your choice of DNS only affect DNS lookup, which is how long it takes the DNS server to resolve the IP address of the domain name requested and send it to you? As in, how would it affect speed other than web browsing?
@yasamoka true it only affects web browsing everything load faster, pages, youtube videos that;s what i said
someone wrote@yasamoka true it only affects web browsing everything load faster, pages, youtube videos that;s what i said
No it does not.
@kassem
yes it does, if u don't believe, read this post

http://lifehacker.com/5835775/google-dns-and-opendns-users-are-getting-a-web-speed-boost

if you don't believe it, try it, if you don't want to, well... stick to what you believe, we all believe in things, whether they are right or wrong, if everyone believed in 1 thing, we would all have one religion... or no religion lol

DISCLAIMER I said in some cases, open dns is better than google dns, it depends on your location
The reason behind the speed bump is that OpenDNS and Google are working with Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) to attach location data to the DNS requests, so when you request a web page, it will go to a server near you rather than, as previously mentioned possibly a server that's not closest to you.
That simply confirms yasamoka's post. But that does not mean that if your connection is 1Mbps, it's going to boost it to 4Mbps, not even to a 1.1Mbps. It simply means that it will cut down on the time it needs to resolve and locate the requested content, but it won't make the rate at which the bytes are transferred over the internet any faster.

Got it? :)
Kassem wrote
The reason behind the speed bump is that OpenDNS and Google are working with Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) to attach location data to the DNS requests, so when you request a web page, it will go to a server near you rather than, as previously mentioned possibly a server that's not closest to you.
That simply confirms yasamoka's post. But that does not mean that if your connection is 1Mbps, it's going to boost it to 4Mbps, not even to a 1.1Mbps. It simply means that it will cut down on the time it needs to resolve and locate the requested content, but it won't make the rate at which the bytes are transferred over the internet any faster.

Got it? :)
I love the tone of your message man, hahaha.

Anyway, I never felt any improvement whilst using any public DNS over the ISP's ones. (In terms of location of content speed)
babum wroteAnyway, I never felt any improvement whilst using any public DNS over the ISP's ones. (In terms of location of content speed)
Well, if your ISP's DNS server updates regularly, and doesn't need to redirect DNS requests to another DNS server, then the latency involved in DNS resolution would be equal to the latency between you and the ISP. Since this is naturally the lowest latency possible concerning any connection you make with an external IP address using your internet connection, then it makes sense that public DNS servers would not offer improvement over the ISP's ones. However, for less common URLs, a public DNS server may offer lower latencies to resolve the IP address of the domain name requested.

Kassem sums it up nicely. :D
Am I teh only one having issues wiz proper english in zis thread or wat ?

Edit : ....?

Edit2: l.o.l it.s t.h.e first of April
Anyone know if this measure made it to a vote yet?
hopefully after today's cabinet meeting we'll hear some news of it