Hughesnet استفاده می کنیم و متاسفانه آنها انحصار در منطقه ما است. ما در نیمه راه زندگی پایین و وجود ندارد پهنای باند در بالای تپه، اما جواب منفی برای ما! بنابراین Hughesnet.
ما تلاش برای حفظ ما 50 گرمی داده (بدون آنلاین بازی, بدون دانلود, فقط دو تلفن و یکی از تلویزیون های هوشمند برای netflix بکشد در آمازون). انفجار با آمازون چون تلویزیون هوشمند به صورت پیش فرض به طور خودکار به بالاترین کیفیت آن می توانید بازی خسته کننده است، از طریق داده های ما در چند روز. Netflix بکشد بهتر است اما هنوز هم در پایان ماه واقعا چسبنده می شود.
اگر من درک درستی، VPN از آنجا که آن را به هر چیزی در مورد استفاده از داده های خود را ندارند نیست، ممکن است کمک کند، که درست است? و یا هر گونه امید برای ما غیر از به سادگی تماشای هر آمازون و knuckling انحصار تشدید این هست
VPN probably isn’t going to be of much use here unless you intentionally get one with a poor connection.
However, one option may be to look into your router or modem settings and see if you can throttle the bandwidth on the TV. That could force the services to stream at lower definition, and save your data a bit.
Edit: should also add that a VPN might be harmful in that it can cause zero rated services to count against your cap (since the data looks likes its coming from the VPN instead of Netflix). Idk if Hughesnet zero rates anything or not, but worth mentioning.
How far are you from top of the hill, and do you have a line of sight? I ask because I helped someone out of almost the same situation. Where they lived (in the sticks, but riverfront property) there was no broadband, and they were forced to use Hugesnet.
Time Warner serviced the area about two miles down the river, so they struck a deal with one of their neighbors. I think it was something along the lines of they got a triple-play package, the neighbors got to use the TV & phone service, and they got the internet access. What I did was setup two of [these devices](https://www.ubnt.com/airmax/nanobeam-ac-gen2/), which are basically long range point-to-point Wifi antennas. Once that was done, they cancelled their Hughesnet account and have been happily surfing at 200 mbps ever since.
Unfortunately there’s nothing that a VPN can make in your case.
With a VPN you will be spending exactly the same data as if you were without it.
At best it will consume more bandwidth, VPN adds overhead which means bigger packets. Only option is a bigger pipe or bandwidth throttling.
50 gigs… that’s rough. I think I consume that much per hour lol. Have you looked into an LTE provider?
Help, maybe; but it’s not worth it.
You can get as much as a 10% increase in bandwidth and throughput by using a VPN with a very high MTU and in-tunnel compression, but it would cost at least $25/month. And it’d only be a 10% boost at MOST. Usually you still end up losing some.
The guy who mentioned a possible deal with a neighbor down the road has a good idea. That’s probably your best bet for a real internet connection.