Quizzes & Puzzles43 mins ago
insufficient bandwidth
9 Answers
what does this mean? please can someone tell me in plain English, it stops me watching anything on BBCIplayer, sometimes i can see a half hour show but not anything longer.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by cecil39. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ."Bandwidth" is determined by how fast your broadband connection is actually running - not the theoretical 'up to 8meg' or whatever your broadband supplier quotes, but the actual speed in mbps (megabits per second) that you router is providing to your PC or television set.
You can test your connection speed here
http://www.thinkbroadband.com/speedtest.html
Any results under about 2.5mbps will mean that iPlayer is a bit flaky. Under 2mbps and it will be hard to watch much at all. I get 3.4mbps and it all works very nicely.
You can test your connection speed here
http://www.thinkbroadband.com/speedtest.html
Any results under about 2.5mbps will mean that iPlayer is a bit flaky. Under 2mbps and it will be hard to watch much at all. I get 3.4mbps and it all works very nicely.
Harry,
I think you've confused your bits and bytes! I don't know many people that talk about speeds in megabytes - they always say they have an 8 meg connection, or 50 meg, meaning megabits, that being a theoretical maximum.
2.5 megabytes (or 20Mbit) is quick - that would equate to about 2.5 megabytes per second. 2.5 megabit on the other hand, would be about 250K per second, which would be towards the slower end of broadband speeds these days.
I think you've confused your bits and bytes! I don't know many people that talk about speeds in megabytes - they always say they have an 8 meg connection, or 50 meg, meaning megabits, that being a theoretical maximum.
2.5 megabytes (or 20Mbit) is quick - that would equate to about 2.5 megabytes per second. 2.5 megabit on the other hand, would be about 250K per second, which would be towards the slower end of broadband speeds these days.