Australian Federal, State and Local Politics
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Super Nova
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by Super Nova » Tue Jun 25, 2013 5:29 pm
Black Orchid wrote:I thought SN meant you could download a movie/show etc and watch it as it downloads. I can't do that. Takes me about 20 mins to download a movie and I am happy with that. TV shows are obviously a lot quicker.
Yes.
Youtube starts before it is fully downloaded.
Movies start before they are fully downloaded. Generally after 1% it can start.
What PC system are you running that does not do this?
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Black Orchid
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by Black Orchid » Tue Jun 25, 2013 6:14 pm
YouTube is streaming though. I download through a Bit Torrent site and cannot watch what I am downloading until it finishes downloading.
Dunno why. Shrugs.
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Super Nova
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by Super Nova » Tue Jun 25, 2013 7:19 pm
Black Orchid wrote:YouTube is streaming though. I download through a Bit Torrent site and cannot watch what I am downloading until it finishes downloading.
Dunno why. Shrugs.
Their transportation protocol does not permit the feature or your PC is not taking advantage of it.
Always remember what you post, send or do on the internet is not private and you are responsible.
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IQS.RLOW
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by IQS.RLOW » Tue Jun 25, 2013 7:44 pm
It's a function of torrents and the way the torrent client collects pieces of the file.
Basically Youtube and the like serial stream the file allowing you to start viewing and it buffers as you go. Torrents collect pieces from anywhere in the file from anyone and reassembles it. There are some clients you can view as you go but only if you have collected enough file information, and even then it can be glitchy.
Quote by Aussie: I was a long term dead beat, wife abusing, drunk, black Muslim, on the dole for decades prison escapee having been convicted of paedophilia
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Super Nova
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by Super Nova » Mon Jul 01, 2013 5:30 pm
Australia.... you will need to upgrade soon.
Twisty beams of light could boost the traffic-carrying capacity of the Internet, effectively adding new levels to the information superhighway, suggests research published today in Science.
Internet traffic is growing exponentially and researchers have sought ways to squeeze ever more information into the fiber-optic cables that carry it. One successful method used over the last 20 years essentially added more traffic lanes, using different colors, or wavelengths, for different signals. But to compensate for the added lanes, each one had to be made narrower. So, just as in a real highway, the spacing could get only so tight before the streams of data began to jumble together.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/artic ... e-internet
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Rorschach
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by Rorschach » Mon Jul 01, 2013 5:41 pm
but what would we know...?
Right?
DOLT - A person who is stupid and entirely tedious at the same time, like bwian. Oblivious to their own mental incapacity. On IGNORE - Warrior, mellie, Nom De Plume, FLEKTARD
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Neferti
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by Neferti » Mon Jul 01, 2013 7:05 pm
"Albo" will be right on it.
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Black Orchid
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by Black Orchid » Thu Jul 04, 2013 11:25 pm
THE NBN Co has hit its politically crucial June 30 rollout target, passing more than 207,000 homes and businesses. But more than one quarter of those are unable to order a service on the superfast fibre network.
The NBN Co has revealed that as of June 30, it had passed 163,500 existing homes and businesses and 44,000 new housing estates with the National Broadband Network.
But of those passed by the fibre footprint only 33,600 homes and businesses, or 16 per cent of premises, have signed up to a service.
In addition to the low take-up rate, the NBN Co's rollout figures also contain as many as 55,000 premises called "service class zero" which although contained in the fibre footprint, are not considered serviceable for another 12-18 months.
These typically include apartments, town houses and shopping centres,
According to the NBN Co's 2012 Corporate Plan, a premise is considered passed "when the shared network and service elements are installed, accepted, commissioned and ready for service which then enables an End-User to order and purchase a broadband service from their choice of retail service provider".
An NBN Co spokesman, however, said that "service class zero" premises have always been included in its rollout statistics.
"We use the accepted industry definition of 'Premises Passed' - that is homes and businesses passed by an active telecommunications network," NBN Co spokesman Andrew Sholl said.
"That standard measure includes those complex premises that will receive services over the NBN outside standard order lead times."
But Opposition communications spokesman Malcolm Turnbull said today the NBN's rollout figures could not be trusted.
"The fact that almost a quarter of houses included in the NBN Co's 'ready for service' list can't actually access an active service shows the depths that Labor would go to in its attempt to convince the public that this project is still on track," Mr Turnbull told The Australian.
"These are not long range targets the NBN Co has to meet they were targets announced three months ago, having been revised down for the third time."
The release of NBN Co's rollout figures are also far below what was targeted when the NBN Co began building the network three years ago.
According to the company's first corporate plan, which was released in December 2010, NBN Co forecast it would have passed 1.2 million homes with its fibre footprint by June 30 this year and about 511,000 homes would be connected.
However, the rollout targets were revised down to 341,000 premises last August because of delays in finalising an $11bn deal to gain access to Telstra infrastructure and customers, and changes in the way NBN Co connects premises to the network.
Then in March this year NBN Co boss Mike Quigley was again forced to downgrade the network's rollout figures after admitting that difficulties in mobilising construction crews on the ground had led to a three-month delay.
In that revision NBN Co forecast it would pass between 190,000 and 220,000 premises with fibre by the end of June, targets that it today revealed had been met.
"These results are pleasing because they demonstrate that the steps we put in place in March to accelerate the rollout have been successful," Mr Quigley said in a statement.
"They also show that NBN Co, together with its industry partners, has the capacity to overcome the challenges inherent in rolling out Australia's largest national infrastructure project."
NBN Co also revealed it had passed 27,300 homes with fixed wireless services, less than half of the 70,000 premises it had planned to pass by June 30.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/nb ... picks=true" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
What a joke. Maybe their next rollout target should be 20,000 and if they manage that they can say they surpassed their target
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Super Nova
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by Super Nova » Thu Jul 04, 2013 11:53 pm
fact that almost a quarter of houses included in the NBN Co's 'ready for service' list can't actually access an active service shows the depths that Labor would go to in its attempt to convince the public that this project is still on track," .
All scorecard driven programme or organisation lie, dammed lie and manipulate statistics.
It's just how it is. The art is to look under the hood and see what is really happening which has been done in the article so the truth is there if you look harder.
a scorecard generally means extra money being wasted as a hypothetical example imagine:
Scorecard 1 - lay cable past X homes by sooner date - impact - big payment milestone - big penalties
Scorecard 2 - have Y homes connect by latter date - impact - small payment milestone - no penalties
While it may be cost effective to connect the homes as they run past laying the cable, management will plan to just run past to hit scorecard 1 even if scorecard 2 is missed and results in a bigger cost. Lower adoptions.
Are the T&C's for this contract in the public domain? I bet they are not.
Always remember what you post, send or do on the internet is not private and you are responsible.
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