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Showing content with the highest reputation on 07/21/2017 in all areas

  1. I'm on a Spectrum 100 Mbps down load, 10 Mbps upload plan. I replaced my 100 Mbps wired router with a used $57 5th gen Apple AirPort Extreme Base Station (gigabit Ethernet) my speeds improved from 80 Mbps average upload to about 116 Mbps. The first pic shows the before and after plot. The second pic is the latest average. the 3rd pic is one test plot with the old router. 4th pic is one test with plot the new router. TestMy helped me identify the potential limitation of the 100 Mbps wired router (it was trying very hard), and testing here documents the improvement. Great site.
    1 point
  2. Regarding the IP thing: @CA3LE if I recall correctly, the SQUID proxy they mention utilizes the `X-Forwarded-For` header, are you perhaps checking that as well? I know I had a similar issue with an Enterprise software application that was logging IP addresses, so I began logging the TCP/IP address and the X-Forwarded-For, as I was getting bizarre results similarly to what you are getting here. I know, for a fact, that the 224.0.0.0/4 address space is Class-D (multicast) so no user should actually have that address, and 240.0.0.0/4 should be Class-E, and that's usually experimental / R&D. Arin is being slow so while I'm looking into these additional details: @C0RR0SIVE: The 250.x.x.x address is part of the experimental space, AFAIK (unless any new RFC's are out) it's used by R&D and for experimental use only. So Arin finally loaded, and I'll give you guys the public URL: https://whois.arin.net/rest/net/NET-240-0-0-0-0/ As I thought, this is still in the "special use" range, which should be mostly non-routed (though I don't think there are any bars against routing these addresses, it's just not common). Thanks, EBrown
    1 point
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