Hello and ive been taking some cool photos on need for speed and i really really want to get them on my computer. but the question is how do i get them? or download them to my computer. please help thanks.
if you use MSI Afterburner, you can set a key to capture screenshots. I think i set mine to F11. then it will save them to a folder of your choosing. thats how I have been saving my screen shots so far!
Support gave up they cant help me and i cant download the game. When i click in the library to download NFS Heat it says preparing to instalation and the bar is loading but there is no progress, than error shows up after a couple of minutes saying something went wrong and i should try again after a few minutes.After the error i can't turon on the installation again i have to restart the EA app. I tried uninstalling the EA app a several times, turining it on as and admin, and clearing the cache. I dont have any files from the game, and Ive played this game a year ago and there was no problems.
I have tried everything as you wrote and I have looked upp other solutions on youtube and google but nothing works. I do not know if there is something wrong with the game or something wrong with the EA app. But you have to fix this in someway. Because i can download every other game that i own except well as you probably know by know need for speed heat.
As to your 400 mbps download speeds, Rokus are not equipped to handle speeds anywhere near that, as they are not needed for streaming commercial video. 10-15 is sufficient for any HD stream you're likely to encounter from an online streaming source. 4K may require 25 or so. The more headroom you have over this allows you to stream or download more things at once before you start to tax the system.
My roku goes up to 12.0 down to 0.3 what's the best setting? Press the house button 5x then rewind button 3x then fast forward 2x the settings will come up just don't know which one to pick I'm computer illiterate pretty much
It's been up and fine since I bought it (maybe 2-3yrs?) and just started this about 6 days ago. I can't get the numbers any higher through the router, but if I connect direct from computer to modem, speed is fine.
What's going on? I'm on firmware v.1.0.0.32 and router now displays there's a firmware update. I am somewhat reluctant to try this, as I need to be connected even at this crippling speed. I just won't be able to download new Linux builds or Windows Images until this problem gets resolved.
I think I figured out the answer to my problem - as mentioned, we had some wild weather last week and we had a power-out. So I'm thinking the router went down and when the power came back, it reset to factory specs, including the never-used QoS section...
The only way in is through the local network. Given your minimal use, there isn't likely to be anyone outside the family or visiting wifi users trying to get at your router, especially if it has a decent password.
Problem:
Multiple users around the world in different countries have incredible low download speeds, f.e. ISP Connection 120mbit, but MSFS2020 is downloading only with 1 to 20 mbit/s. The problem is there since release and is touching not only the download for the whole game or major updates, but also the ingame download through the marketplace.
Multiple users are reporting that at the same time, online speedtest and f.e Steam downloads have no problem and are giving the full download speed bandwith, so that it appears that its not a individual connection problem. Often the only thing which helps them is using a VPN and trying out different servers, sometimes even in the same country as they are located.
I managed to download the whole installation in about 2 hours with the max speed shown on some of the larger files at over 250MBps.
Subsequent updates all downloaded very quickly and in line with my expectations of a 300MBps connection.
The only thing which helps me is using a free VPN.
So for anyone who tried every step and is still suffering from download speeds like it is 2001 and doesnt want to pay for a VPN or give credit card informations:
1.) Google for ProtonVPN, register, download and install (absolutely no payment or credit card information is needed for the free servers from the USA, Nethlerlands and Japan
2.) Try every server from the USA, on Server 3, 4 and 8 I get at least 40 mbit, sometimes 70mbit (with a 120mbit connection), still not what I should get with my connection, but better than the 10mbit I get without VPN
I use Bell Fibe in NS with 1.5 Gbps service and have always suffered with slow downloads since the Tech Alpha. Max I get is 30Mbps until I connect a VPN. With a VPN connected, I can normally get 250-300Mbps.
The VPN connection also goes through your 2 routers, so its highly unlikely that its the 2 routers fault. Also basically everyone has slow download speed for msfs2020, the fault is on Asobo/Microsofts side.
Apart form the fact that I was getting good download speeds, then for a few months bad download speeds (maybe I messed up some settings) but now after making some adjustments to my network card settings and windows settings I am reliably getting close to my 300Mbps that my ISP provides.
I sent all my testing info through to Microsoft as a ticket. Most likely would only help those that are downloading from a specific server in Canada. Gave them everything I could so hopefully they use the data to trace things out.
I also suggested in my ticket to allow users to swap download endpoints from a list to allow users to potentially bypass hops that may be giving them issues. Much the same way we can change game servers, why not allow us to change download servers?
Internet speed, on the other hand, is the rate at which data can be downloaded or uploaded on a given device. This is also measured in Mbps. Keep in mind that, when comparing internet plans, the speeds listed are only the maximum speeds you could possibly receive.
Think about a highway when comparing bandwidth and speed. Bandwidth represents the number of lanes on a highway. The more lanes on a highway, the more cars that can be on the highway at a given time. When there are fewer cars on the road, the cars move quickly. The more cars you add to the highway, the slower the cars move because the route becomes congested.
Symmetrical speeds refer to an internet plan with the same upload and download speeds. Some internet plans offer symmetrical speeds, which means the download and upload speeds are the same. This feature is particularly important for users who heavily rely on upload-intensive tasks. For instance, a graphic designer who needs to upload large design files to clients or a YouTuber who regularly uploads high-quality videos would greatly benefit from symmetrical speeds.
The speed seems the same today on the affected system. The same user account, on another system, on the same network, seems to have much better performance. This could be something on the client-side.
I am trying to make a direct connection between my client devices and resources when they are on the same network. Is that something that should already be happening or do you need to enable it on my account?
Compare typical online activities with the minimum download speed (Megabits per second, or Mbps) needed for adequate performance for each application. Additional speed may enhance performance. Speeds are based on running one activity at a time.
For household broadband needs, use our Household Broadband Guide to compare minimum Mbps needs for light, moderate and high household use with one, two, three or four devices at a time (such as a laptop, tablet or game console).
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I am working on an Android app where I need to, as accurately as possible, measure the download speed of the current connection. Here's the best method I could find so far (basically I start a timer, start downloading a Linux distro from a fast server, download around 200 kbytes, then stop the timer and check time elapsed and total bytes downloaded):
If you are looking to do this on the fly on an arbitrary device (vs. in a lab setting), you will need to follow Jeffrey's recommendation, because other apps can consume bandwidth that would be reported by getTotalRxBytes().
This tests download speed from this host. If that is the host you will be communicating with for "real stuff", that's cool. Or, if you just generically need an idea of download speed, it's OK. But testing download speed from Site A and assuming that it will be accurate for Site B will be unreliable, as Site A and Site B might not even be on the same continent.
If you expect to do this a lot, the owner of the host you are testing against may be mildly irritated at the bandwidth expense, excessive log entries, etc. Ideally, you would only do this against something you own.
All the standard caveats regarding Internet access (e.g., server may be down) and mobile devices (e.g., user might start on WiFi and move out of range, drastically changing your download ability) apply.
Use the code below. I used it for measuring download speed.You don't need to save the file for the purpose of measuring download speed. You also probably don't need to use OkHttp. I used it because it was used in our project.
Your proposed code tests the speed using 1 thread. This is not recommended way as it will not maximize the full capacity of the internet connection. Most of the standards recommend multithreaded testing.
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