The first issue is this: can you choose the source server?
You may be able to ping the resource server to see what the connection looks like or trace route to see if there is a slow router on your connection.
The usual bottleneck up-loading is your internet connection, but you should see an improvement by moving off, say, DSL to fibre optic when downloading. But nothing will change if your own last link is a poor wireless connection.
Are you writing to a fast drive on a fast connection? External drives are usually slower. Is your internal drive correctly partitioned and defragmented for your tasks? Download to \temp on its own partition where the OS is not writing its own log files. Defrag that partition and keep it clean.
Download to a better positioned server on your corp intranet and then copy or read from that server. Get IT tech advice on decompress if that is slow. Again, an IT tech or staff programmer can script that for you if the delay is affecting a mission critical process rather than you missing a chance to stand and stretch. If this is your annoying first task of the day, get it scheduled to run before you arrive - but read the log or request an informative script report. I use Rebol, but Python is known to most IT programmers.
Tip: have a tech write the result with size and date to a text area of your homepage; clear browser cache when you leave; refresh your home page when you arrive. Start using the CRC check for the file if it is known.
Your own virus check at the end of the download may be taking more time than the download itself. Skip that step with a script at your risk.
For very large files, having a spare CPU core or a spare processor and a large non-fragmented hard drive might make for slight improvement - but downloading is not what occupies many CPU cycles and should be running as a background process using cycles as available.
The note below on IDM and the like is for the case when downloading many files at the time where most of your time is spent on download-related tasks. It is unlikely to affect the speed of a single large file download as sometimes claimed.
You can yourself write a script and set it to run as a high-priority process or write a small app to use a large buffer - but with what ROI? Is the download critical to a business process? Then set a cron in crontab or re-think why the whole file is being sent each time. Can you switch from XML to JSON? From JSON to binary serialized objects (marshalling/unmarshalling) ?
Again, a question of ROI for time and effort looking into this when your OS would let you schedule the task with less effort. See: iOS 6 'Power Nap' approach.
There are ways to speed up your downloads, including:- Turning off or stopping unnecessary programs before you start. Download at quieter times of the day - such as late night, early morning - when most kids are in bed. Choosing to download from a closer source (if you have the choice)
Just use an download accelerator. eg: IDM, DAP
Free Download Manager is an open source download mangager that can pause and resume downloads. It splits downloads into different sections and downloads the sections simulaneously to speed up downloading. For more information, please visit their homepage (link in the related links section)
it won't speed up to pc, what it will do its speed up loading up high graphic such as games etc
Most products or services advertised as internet boosters are scams. Primarily the speed of your internet connection is determined by the quality and specifications of your connection to your ISP or internet service provider. Some download managers help speed up downloads by splitting them in to multiple files and downloading them from multiple places at once. This helps if your connection is fast but where you are downloading from is not.
Go to "settings." It will have the option. just select it.
When you are downloading/uploading the file, you are referred to as the 'leecher'. Once your download is complete, you will see that your Bittorent client will keep on uploading the file, since downloading takes much less time than uploading. Once you have completely uploaded the file, you are known as a 'seeder'. The more the seeders on a torrent, the faster the downloads. That's why its called P2P (peer-to-peer), so you download and share at the same time! Seeding will not affect your download speed, since your download and upload speed are two different things, uploads do not affect downloads!
how to speed up easymule download
Internet Download Manager speeds up internet downloads by using a logic accelerator. This uses dynamic file segmentation and multi-part downloading technology to accelerate your downloads.
You should take high speed internet like time warner
No, there is no scope to speed up bit torrent with some tweak or changing preference setting in torrent client. However, it depends on the package speed of Internet connection. Though some way some bit torrent client can be speed up but not like incredible like 1Mbps or 1000KBps etc.
No!
Your utorrent downloads may appear to be capped because of you Internet speed.
Good Speed
Free Download Manager is an open source download mangager that can pause and resume downloads. It splits downloads into different sections and downloads the sections simulaneously to speed up downloading. For more information, please visit their homepage (link in the related links section)
Free Download Manager is an open source download mangager that can pause and resume downloads. It splits downloads into different sections and downloads the sections simulaneously to speed up downloading. For more information, please visit their homepage (link in the related links section)
Yes - the software is designed to speed up downloads - from any site, not just Youtube.
you can't limit the speed of downloads on a pc. But you can on a router aka. Wifi and modems
The download speed can be known in the download bar. It is present in the menu and then downloads.