On 5/13/21 1:32 PM, Russell Senior wrote:
In the context of paying for bandwidth during a Zoom call, unless you
have a way of turning off those other uses, you are going to end up
shuttling those bytes over your data plan and needing to pay for them
anyway, so it seems to me worth counting
On 5/13/21 12:23 PM, Paul Heinlein wrote:
I know that Russell is aware of this, but it's worth noting that
aggregate numbers won't necessarily be limited to your Zoom session.
Your package manager may be configured to look for updates every once
in a while; a cron job may kick off a network
On 5/13/21 11:44 AM, Russell Senior wrote:
You do want to be looking at the whole picture though, not just
firefox. Those numbers are way too low to be your online meeting.
You might want to track total in/out bytes of the interface. Before
and after your meeting run ifconfig -a. For each
On Thu, May 13, 2021 at 12:23 PM Paul Heinlein wrote:
>
> On Thu, 13 May 2021, Russell Senior wrote:
>
> > You do want to be looking at the whole picture though, not just
> > firefox. Those numbers are way too low to be your online meeting.
> >
> > You might want to track total in/out bytes of
On Thu, 13 May 2021, Russell Senior wrote:
You do want to be looking at the whole picture though, not just
firefox. Those numbers are way too low to be your online meeting.
You might want to track total in/out bytes of the interface. Before
and after your meeting run ifconfig -a. For each
You do want to be looking at the whole picture though, not just
firefox. Those numbers are way too low to be your online meeting.
You might want to track total in/out bytes of the interface. Before
and after your meeting run ifconfig -a. For each interface, you should
see a line like:
On 5/12/21 10:58 PM, TomasK wrote:
Or you could just read the in/out 75MB/53.6MB numbers I put in brackets
for you, double check the columns and call it a day.
In the light of "another day" this makes sense.
Thanks.
--
Regards,
Dick Steffens
Or you could just read the in/out 75MB/53.6MB numbers I put in brackets
for you, double check the columns and call it a day.
my 2c
On Wed, 2021-05-12 at 22:54 -0700, Dick Steffens wrote:
> On 5/12/21 10:47 PM, TomasK wrote:
> > netstat is normally the program to interpret/parse this.
> > If you
On 5/12/21 10:47 PM, TomasK wrote:
netstat is normally the program to interpret/parse this.
If you do not mind column-izing it - I suggest the number in OutOctets
(53,633,193) columns should tell you how many bites went out and
inOctets (75,040,712) how many bytes came in. If I counted the
netstat is normally the program to interpret/parse this.
If you do not mind column-izing it - I suggest the number in OutOctets
(53,633,193) columns should tell you how many bites went out and
inOctets (75,040,712) how many bytes came in. If I counted the columns
right.
As always Google is your
On 5/11/21 2:17 PM, TomasK wrote:
1. start web browser with single tab - your zoom/whatever only
2. find web browsers pid (ps -ef |grep firefox)
3. Do you conference
call - Do not exit after the call ends
4. Check network usage for the process in: /proc/pid/net/netstat
5. now you can quit
On 5/11/21 6:49 PM, Larry Brigman wrote:
Zoom uses an adaptive bitrate codec. The bandwidth you use will be
dependent upon latency to and from the server.
A test on your broadband connection will be different than a wireless
connection.
Thanks. Good to know.
--
Regards,
Dick Steffens
Zoom uses an adaptive bitrate codec. The bandwidth you use will be
dependent upon latency to and from the server.
A test on your broadband connection will be different than a wireless
connection.
On Tue, May 11, 2021, 4:03 PM Rich Shepard wrote:
> On Tue, 11 May 2021, Dick Steffens wrote:
>
On Tue, 11 May 2021, Dick Steffens wrote:
My purpose is collecting data so when I go to the wireless folks I'll know
about how much we'll be using each month (a 1-1/2 hour meeting twice a
week), and know what data plan will make sense when we set one up for the
building that has no phone or
On 5/11/21 2:36 PM, Bill Barry wrote:
On Tue, May 11, 2021, 4:24 PM Dick Steffens wrote:
On 5/11/21 2:17 PM, Rich Shepard wrote:
On Tue, 11 May 2021, Dick Steffens wrote:
Is there a recommended too or procedure for logging how much data I
use while hosting a Zoom meeting? The meeting
On Tue, May 11, 2021, 4:24 PM Dick Steffens wrote:
> On 5/11/21 2:17 PM, Rich Shepard wrote:
> > On Tue, 11 May 2021, Dick Steffens wrote:
> >
> >> Is there a recommended too or procedure for logging how much data I
> >> use while hosting a Zoom meeting? The meeting typically takes about
> >> an
On 5/11/21 2:17 PM, Rich Shepard wrote:
On Tue, 11 May 2021, Dick Steffens wrote:
Is there a recommended too or procedure for logging how much data I
use while hosting a Zoom meeting? The meeting typically takes about
an hour and 20 minutes. I need to know how much "data" I use during
that
On 5/11/21 2:17 PM, TomasK wrote:
1. start web browser with single tab - your zoom/whatever only
2. find web browsers pid (ps -ef |grep firefox)
3. Do you conference
call - Do not exit after the call ends
4. Check network usage for the process in: /proc/pid/net/netstat
5. now you can quit
1. start web browser with single tab - your zoom/whatever only
2. find web browsers pid (ps -ef |grep firefox)
3. Do you conference
call - Do not exit after the call ends
4. Check network usage for the process in: /proc/pid/net/netstat
5. now you can quit firefox
Best, Tomas
On Tue, 2021-05-11
On Tue, 11 May 2021, Dick Steffens wrote:
Is there a recommended too or procedure for logging how much data I use while
hosting a Zoom meeting? The meeting typically takes about an hour and 20
minutes. I need to know how much "data" I use during that meeting.
Dick,
I know that the wireless
Is there a recommended too or procedure for logging how much data I use
while hosting a Zoom meeting? The meeting typically takes about an hour
and 20 minutes. I need to know how much "data" I use during that meeting.
I've found a link describing vnStat from November, 2011. Is that still a
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