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翻訳の問題を報告
You should try the Hardware and OS forum.
Same goes for online gaming. If your roommate is using lot of bandwidth, you might want to wait playing online games that require your quick actions.
This is really no brainer question. Are you baiting for something or looking for some non-obivous answers? Are you expecting funny answer, to give points to?
no im serious.
watching videos while gaming online never slowed my games down. and i vaguely remember people telling me that online gaming doesn't take up much bandwidth so i need to know for sure how badly it slows my friend's torrents
also, if both our internet usage fight for bandwidth how come i don't feel my online games or videos slowing down when i use them while he is torrenting?
Of course. His piracy stuff is taking up bandwidth, and that's limited. Your video is taking up bandwidth too, so... he'll get less of it.
Generally, data packets have priority that router sets. Most routers will likely place video streaming and gaming on higher priority.
This is the reason you may not feel slowdown. Hence your roommate will take the hit on less priority, slowing his/her downloads when you are watching video (unlikely for gaming, like you said doesn't take as much bandwidth).
But taking into account that your roommate is torrenting, it doesn't guarantee high speed for him/her unless there's enough seed and high speed data providing users. So it may not be entirely your fault.
You watching ytube stream whatnot is less likely to be largely impactful.
To speedup your router overall, you want to disable bandwidth load-balancing (I think that's what it was called), as it reserves big chunk of bandwidth so that it can balance bandwidth distribution between users. The amount of chunk it takes may really defeat the purpose tbh. But may be required for network where certain user(s) are uncontrollable of how much bandwidth they eat up (likely your roommate).
Additionally, your roommate torrenting, means high chances of malware attacks to his/her PC and to router, which effects network speed overall.
So to conlcusion,
Or, the tracker servers might not like you for one reason or another and not let peers connect.
Looking up seeders and leechers as well as P2P should do the trick for starters.
because you need to remember when downloading a torrented file, you are not downloading a file from a server but many small segments of the file from other peoples computers.
its very common for download speeds to fluctuate as a result.
How fast is your internet
How much do you download
How much he can download per second
How much can all seeders and pears upload per second
What are his specs and does it cause any bottleneck
and so on.
Any and all online activity will take up a portion of your bandwidth. Doesn't matter whether it's upstream or downstream. If he's seeding, that will also slow things down. If you're doing anything at all whatsoever with the internet, that will also slow things down.
Hell, you could have some schmuck piggybacking on your connection via the WiFi or via some backdoor or possibly a RAT - remote access trojan - , or your ISP could be throttling the connection because you or more likely he is using too much bandwidth or you're unfortunate enough to be using Comcast. In either case that will also slow it down.
Course if you've got a backdoor or a RAT then you've got bigger issues.
Some guy that knows a friend of mine said it did.
ok thx.
but how much is different activity affects the bandwidth? is online gaming the same as watching youtube?