Saturday, December 6, 2008

Internet Connection Sharing & Increase BROADBAND

Internet Connection Sharing

To enable Internet Connection Sharing on a network connection
  1. Open Network Connections.
  2. Click the dial-up, local area network, PPPoE, or VPN connection you want to share, and then, under Network Tasks, click Change settings of this connection.
  3. On the Advanced tab, select the Allow other network users to connect through this computer's Internet connection check box.
  4. If you want this connection to dial automatically when another computer on your home or small office network attempts to access external resources, select the Establish a dial-up connection whenever a computer on my network attempts to access the Internet check box.
  5. If you want other network users to enable or disable the shared Internet connection, select the Allow other network users to control or disable the shared Internet connection check box.
  6. Under Internet Connection Sharing, in Home networking connection, select any adapter that connects the computer sharing its Internet connection to the other computers on your network.

Increase BROADBAND

This is for broad band connections. I didn’t try it on dial up but might work for dial up.

  1. make sure your logged on as actually "Administrator". do not log on with any account that just has administrator privileges.
  2. start - run - type gpedit.msc
  3. expand the "local computer policy" branch
  4. expand the "administrative templates" branch
  5. expand the "network branch"
  6. Highlight the "QoS Packet Scheduler" in left window
  7. in right window double click the "limit reservable bandwidth" setting
  8. on setting tab check the "enabled" item
  9. where it says "Bandwidth limit %" change it to read 0

Effect is immediate on some systems, some need to re-boot. This is more of a "counter what XP does" thing. In other words, programs can request up to 20% of the bandwidth be reserved for them, even with QoS disabled, this is no big deal and most programs do not request it. So, although QOS has caused a big stink because people think it reserves 20% of their bandwidth, you can still disable it, just to be sure.

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