Increase the speed of light.
By increasing the speed of light you will increase the speed of your
file transfer. Ask management to fund advanced research into light
accelerators, then wait to do your transfers after light has been speed up
by a few orders of magnitude. (This works best for non-technical folks)
or Use the turbo switch on the back of the router labeled - / o or...
Pull fiber directly from A to B
Help out the economy and network staff. Buy a backhoe, some explosives,
and a fiber splice hit. Start at location A, use gps to plot a direct path
to B(as the crow flys), point the tractor in the precise direction and do
not deviate. Remove any buildings, reroute roads, destroy gardens, but keep
driving in a straight line. Don't bother with regen, just stay the course.
(Works good for technical staff who don't yet get it)
.........OR..................
""Nate"" wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> We've run a bandwidth test on our DS3 with nothing connected to it but a
> workstation (and obviously a router/pix). We went to testmyspeed.com as
> well as dslreports.com. We both got very good bandwidth tests (upward
6m/s)
> however in transferring a 200m file to/from a workstation behind the
> connection, we got over 30 minutes while our existing T1 got 26 minutes.
> Anyone mind explaining this phenomenon? Just a side note, we have no
> encryption between GRE tunnels. Thanks in advanced.
>
> -Nate
>
.....
Tune your tcp stack on the send side.
http://www.psc.edu/networking/perf_tune.html
http://www-iepm.slac.stanford.edu/monitoring/bulk/fast/
Or maybe you have a real life problem or capacity shortage somewhere.
Good Luck,
Darrell
Always looking for the next big project...
darrell (at) hayaitacos net
Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=65796&t=65790
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