Zoe
Member
If true, any indirect way to change this?
I've seen people say that sometimes pausing and restarting the download repeatedly could get you connected to different servers.
If true, any indirect way to change this?
Fixed.I've seen people say thatsometimespausing and restarting the downloadrepeatedlywill get you connected to different servers.
You explained it in less words than a Twitter post and Sony couldn't' put that on PSN. Again, that's not bad design?
Downloading and installing Dragon Force from the Japanese store took me all of an hour, from a US console.
Good luck doing that on the 360, or even getting to their Japanese store.
The PSN is the absolute best for region-free gaming, no two ways about it.
Downloading and installing Dragon Force from the Japanese store took me all of an hour, from a US console.
Good luck doing that on the 360, or even getting to their Japanese store.
The PSN is the absolute best for region-free gaming, no two ways about it.
Relevant to a different thread. Not this one.
I think the problem is people aren't configuring their routers properly for the PS3/PSN. that's why they are getting slow speeds.
I think the problem is people aren't configuring their routers properly for the PS3/PSN. that's why they are getting slow speeds.
GTFO with that garbage who the hell is going to change there home network for one device. I have 3 online wifi consoles 3 online wifi laptops a roku box and at least 2 phones 2 tablets that all use wifi. The PS3 is the only one with a problem.
But I need to reconfigure my router????
Router has nothing to do with it. If I take the router out of the equation, nothing changes.
I never understand when people hate on PSN for download speeds. I guess it must just vary a lot.
It's not. If it were, everyone would have slow downloads. That's not the case.I honestly don't think it's there network. I believe it's something within the design of the PS3 itself.
Even my Vita has better download speeds than my PS3. (Over wifi of course)
You dont have to change your home network. You just need to open the ports for the PSN. It's worked for lots of people including myself.
Downloading a 217mb update for the MGS HD Collection.
Been at least an hour. Currently on 67%.
I wouldn't mind but my PS3 is easily the slowest device I own. No other piece of computing equipment I own takes this long to do anything.
I honestly don't think it's there network. I believe it's something within the design of the PS3 itself.
I've done all of this before and PSN is still slow as shit. I'm pretty sure the problem is with my PS3 since I have an older, "fat" model and I heard that the WiFi antennas are placed poorly in these.You dont have to change your home network. You just need to open the ports for the PSN. It's worked for lots of people including myself.
http://us.playstation.com/support/answer/index.htm?a_id=241
Go here http://portforward.com/english/routers/port_forwarding/routerindex.htm look for your router then look for PlayStation Network and follow the instructions.
I have a more stable connection and faster speeds. I also used to have a NAT 3 connection but, after following that portforward guide I now have a NAT 2 connection and dont get randomly kicked off the PSN anymore.
If anyone has a D-link DGL 4500 gaming router here is a good guide on how to set up game fuel for PSN.
Doesn't the PSN use a third-party content distribution network, and your speeds are probably dependent on your local server's capacity? I thought I read they used Akamai, but I could be wrong.
I've done all of this before and PSN is still slow as shit. I'm pretty sure the problem is with my PS3 since I have an older, "fat" model and I heard that the WiFi antennas are placed poorly in these.
There's no need to guess. As long as I can remember, this has been one of the longstanding and most commonly-complained about issues with PSN from the beginning, especially after more multi-gig releases were made available, particularly with PSN+ offering tons of those to D/L. Whatever the case, PS3 PSN access is the only case for a network device that I have that has need for more than just port-forwarding to operate satisfactorily. Everything else I have works great out-of-the-box.I never understand when people hate on PSN for download speeds. I guess it must just vary a lot.
I've done all of this before and PSN is still slow as shit. I'm pretty sure the problem is with my PS3 since I have an older, "fat" model and I heard that the WiFi antennas are placed poorly in these.
This needs to happen on both PSN and XBL. One long list of everything is dumb and annoying without sorting options. They both need to adopt Steam's library view to make going back through your uninstalled library easier.- An option on Account history to remove/hide demos, or some other method to show and separate owned DLC & games.
This might be because of streaming demands of or writes to the hard drive while playing.- To be able to continue DLs while playing -every- game when not signed into the PSN. Stuff like RDR pauses downloads whether you're on the PSN or not. Somewhat annoying.
I think PSN is awesome, i just learned you can have 2 consoles active, and re download all the stuff you bought on them, and if one messes up you deactivate it and and activate a new one online. Does xbox have similar feature?
I just used the connection test and it says 5.5 down, 1.9 up with like 60% signal strength, I'm located about 30-40 feet from my router, HDD is fine, I've downloaded game demos, games, and trailers, my router is this one and I haven't tried using my PC as a proxy but it's certainly faster.Hard to say. My Fat wireless was fine.
What does your PS3 Connection Test say ? Where are you located ? Do your HDD have issues ? What were you trying to download ? Which router are you using ? Does download speed up if you use a PC/Mac as a proxy ? etc.
I might try that out, I'm just wondering how it works. Correct me if I'm wrong, but from my understanding, it gives you broadband from a power outlet? I might be misunderstanding but I didn't even know that was possible.Yes, the old PS3 doesn't have good wi-fi. That's why you should use a wired connection if you're able to. If you're too far away from your router for a wired connection, I would recommend something like this http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0083GA6UW/?tag=neogaf0e-20 It's not as good as being directly connected to your router but, it's a whole lot better than a wireless connection.
I might try that out, I'm just wondering how it works. Correct me if I'm wrong, but from my understanding, it gives you broadband from a power outlet? I might be misunderstanding but I didn't even know that was possible.
I was also thinking about buying a new PS3 when the new revision comes out but it's not even going to have wireless n so I don't know.
I just used the connection test and it says 5.5 down, 1.9 up with like 60% signal strength, I'm located about 30-40 feet from my router, HDD is fine, I've downloaded game demos, games, and trailers, my router is this one and I haven't tried using my PC as a proxy but it's certainly faster.
I might try that out, I'm just wondering how it works. Correct me if I'm wrong, but from my understanding, it gives you broadband from a power outlet? I might be misunderstanding but I didn't even know that was possible.
I was also thinking about buying a new PS3 when the new revision comes out but it's not even going to have wireless n so I don't know.
What I'm trying to say is that the way the PS3 makes you install things after they background download is not something they can turn off.
Installing one single game takes all other tasks away from the user. It's probably how the PS3 was designed, rather than being one of those quirks that can be updated away.
Seems like an ISP problem than a PSN one.
I rarely background download and still get neat speeds.
I'm going to explain this to you directly, since you won't read my posts.
The bubble system is part of the PS3's design. It cannot be excised.
This means activating a 32 KB unlock key would produce another bubble if not for the Store's auto-install feature. This is the purpose of the storefront download.
True, the crappy download speeds though does have something to do with it. I'm with Brad, I always have had slow downloads both at home and at work, and our office bandwidth and speeds are massively high. I wonder if its Bay Area related? Which would be amusing, since SCEA is based here.
I don't understand why some people with good internet have crap speeds from PSN. Took me about an hour to download around 4.5GB from PSN a few weeks ago.
I also read a lot about large patch updates taking 30 minutes or more to download, when I downloaded the Uncharted 3 patch (I think it was around 250MB?) in about 5 minutes.
The 360 needed those overhauls. The Store leaves a ton to be desired, but the XMB has always been a clean, simple, and user-friendly system.
man why would they even make the store download just vanish if something happens to it?
Why wouldn't they just make it act like background downloads? It seems crazy that it would just delete half a game for no reason.
There's no speed problem with PSN. I'm wireless (yes i am) and i download on PSN at almost 1MB/sec, my maximum internet bandwidth, so...
In fact, i never had a single problem with PSN apart from that PSN hacks one year ago.
you can backup your dlc and your installs that way ( done it , yes even the locked saves your ps3 has).
I'm pretty sure I have picked up 360 downloads where they left off when I lost my connection.
I get over 1MB/s on PSN. Your router/internet sucks.
A lot of people also have their PS3 connected over wireless because it has built in wifi. I have a hard time trusting random people thinking they know what they're talking about in the context of networking. I haven't seen any empirical evidence to support their claims that PSN is significantly slower across the board.
My 360 and PS3 sit right next to each other. Same network, same distance from the wireless router, same number of walls to pull a signal through, same amount of interference to deal with.
I can start downloading the exact same demo on each device and the 360 always downloads it faster. Much faster. Even if I plug an Ethernet cord into the PS3, the 360 still downloads it faster over my wireless network. I put the PS3 as highest priority in my QoS settings and my 360 still downloads faster. I've also tried it on 2 different PS3 systems - a launch 60gb unit and a 40gb unit from fall 2007.
I've tried different routers - Dlink dir-655, netgear wndr3300, and a linksys ea4500, and it's the same performance. I've timed downloading a 1gb file from PSN through my network and then done the exact same thing with the PS3 running straight to my cable modem, and it's slightly faster, but not by much.
I have done everything humanly possible at my end to speed up downloading on the PS3 and its made no difference.
Downloading and installing Dragon Force from the Japanese store took me all of an hour, from a US console.
Good luck doing that on the 360, or even getting to their Japanese store.
The PSN is the absolute best for region-free gaming, no two ways about it.
I think PSN is awesome, i just learned you can have 2 consoles active, and re download all the stuff you bought on them, and if one messes up you deactivate it and and activate a new one online. Does xbox have similar feature?
This needs to happen on both PSN and XBL. One long list of everything is dumb and annoying without sorting options. They both need to adopt Steam's library view to make going back through your uninstalled library easier.
I think you'll find it's the users with the faster Internet connections that are usually complaining about PSN speed.
Those on slower connections don't notice as much of a difference, but when you're pulling 30 Mbits or more through your pipe, you start to notice when a server can't keep up.
Aren't PS3 backups system locked? If you backup a system and the system fails, can you then restore that backup to a brand new PS3?
I think you'll find it's the users with the faster Internet connections that are usually complaining about PSN speed.
Those on slower connections don't notice as much of a difference, but when you're pulling 30 Mbits or more through your pipe, you start to notice when a server can't keep up.
...
I'm also in the Bay Area and have more than enough bandwidth to go around. PSN has always been slower than Xbox Live in terms of download speed for me, though to be fair Sony has upped the PSN game recently. I don't know if they brought more servers online or simply moved to a better data center, but I would say that over the past six months I've seen faster PSN speeds than I've ever seen before.
It's all relative. When you've got a fast pipe, an hour to download 4.5 GB is slow.
That's probably the biggest problem with discussions like this. Most everyone is speaking in relative terms rather than actual speeds.
PSN reports I Am Alive as being a 1954 MB download.
Xbox Live reports I Am Alive as being a 1.86 GB download. That converts to 1905 MB.
To time the downloads I used a stopwatch. Pressed start on the stopwatch when I pressed the button to initate the download. I stopped the stopwatch as soon as the system indicated the download had completed.
On PSN I downloaded 1954 MB in 11 minutes and 23 seconds. (683 seconds)
On Xbox Live I downloaded 1905 MB in 7 minutes and 18 seconds. (438 seconds)
Unless I've done my match wrong, that works out to the following:
PSN = 2.86 MB/s (or 22.89 Mb/s) download speed.
Xbox Live = 4.35 MB/s (or 34.79 Mb/s) download speed.
Granted, that's a single run, but PSN is downloading at two thirds the speed of Xbox Live.
My PS3 Connection Test says my download link is 98.6Mbps. I have never encountered any download speed issues in the Bay Area.
Yeah, you'll need to run more tests based on different games and systems. One run is inconclusive. We already know from earlier feedback that the performance may vary for different PS3s on the same network.
If I run my connection test multiple times, I see it fluctuate too. It reports higher than 98.6 sometimes, and lower other times.
I did a similar test a while ago but I'm not sure where I posted my results. I'll have a look. My results showed that XBL was faster but not significantly faster (just about 200KB/s faster).What would be simplest (and give the widest range of results) would be to have others post their results with the same demo download. Since it is a third part, catalog title, I doubt I Am Alive has any special treatment in terms of cache placement on the servers.
If would be interesting to see:
1) If either service has a distinct advantage.
2) If differences are regional.
3) If differences are by ISP.
4) If either service has a maximum cap.
That last one intrigues me. What is the point at which a faster pipe does you no good as neither PSN or Xbox Live simply won't go that fast?
How long does it take you to download the I Am Alive demo on you PS3 on your connection?