If you are using a wireless system, it is possible that someone else is using it as well. If this is the case, take some measures to secure your system against hackers. Yahoo had an article on the opening page concerning this yesterday.
2006-10-26 23:58:01
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answer #1
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answered by Letsee 4
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Because if you read your contract they don't guarantee that it's fast all the time. ISPs often sell to enough customers where they can't guarantee maximum bandwidth. It still shouldn't be dreadfully slow, but it will rarely ever be as great as they say it is.
Sometimes they do screw up their networks though. You have to call them to let them know.
Let me give you an example of a problem I was having one time. I called up comcast to say my internet was slow and they said there wasn't any problem. The problem gradually got worse. The ping time was over 1 second. At this point I decided that I was smarter than comcast engineers and found a way around it.
Read on only if you care to hear technical babel.
Turns out comcast assigns IP addresses based on your MAC. They save your MAC for a week or two in a cache. As long as you have your device plugged in it will assign your PC a static IP address. This isn't a guarantee, but it usually works this way. I spoofed my MAC address, to get assigned a new IP address. Turns out I was assigned to a new node as well which was great. The old node was obviously malfunctioning. This was a while ago. Comcast behaves better now.
2006-10-27 00:13:34
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answer #2
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answered by To Be Free 4
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Depends on your type of service: dial-up, DSL, cable, etc. Sometimes its heavy traffic at that site or competition fon your bandwidth. Some web pages have complicated graphics (especially animations) that slow down the uploading. Just like auto traffic, some times of the day can be slower going than others.
2006-10-26 23:58:19
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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via fact which you're a point 3 member, you're patently very pc literate so i ought to ask you, ARE YOU doing all of the mandatory housework, removing uncessary STARTUPS that have a habit of creeping in on your pc and slowing issues up extraordinarily. Do you oftentimes sparkling your REGISTRY which has a habit of gathering all kinds of logs and dll's and uncessary stuff that slows your workstation down. Do you utilize cleanup, get rid of temps, and background and do you defrag a week? If the answer to any of those questions isn't any. then you definately can see what's slowing your workstation down. i'm hoping you have consumer-friendly cleanser. it is loose and foolproof. you are able to touch the REGISTY case in point, press discover, wait a couple of minutes and liely see seventy 5 or greater errors. So in basic terms press pick ALL and DELETE ALL. Do the comparable for "Uncessary information". and seem carefull ay the Startup record. Do you easily want ADOBE or MESSENGER or ITUNES at Starup? NO you do no longer. in basic terms delete those from the startup record on consumer-friendly cleanser. i'm particular your workstation will rejuvenate to its previous speedy state!
2016-10-03 00:32:33
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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Fla,
Sometimes if you have to many applications open at the same time, this can cause your computer to run a little sluggish. Assuming you have a good ISP and you have DSL, it could be simply traffic. Take note of the time of day that this occurs and it might become predictable on your end.
TDCWH
2006-10-27 00:08:48
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answer #5
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answered by TDCWH 7
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as u mentioned, its not regular thing. so probably its the network congestion. try switching over to highger bandwidth.
2006-10-27 00:05:49
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answer #6
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answered by chaits 2
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if your computer is downloading something while you try to use it, it causes it to be VERY slow.
2006-10-27 00:02:17
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answer #7
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answered by start 6-22-06 summer time Mom 6
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try contacting your ISP
2006-10-26 23:55:23
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answer #8
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answered by girl21 2
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