SunnyD
Belgian Waffler
For real! Picturing borescope meet rectum just before dinner time is rather displeasing. D:
What's sad is that after I posted that tidbit, it dawned on me that we'll likely be seeing that in sigs across the forum shortly. :\
For real! Picturing borescope meet rectum just before dinner time is rather displeasing. D:
http://www.manu-j.com/blog/opendns-alternative-google-dns-rocks/403/
Has a script you can run that will tell you which is faster - Google, OpenDNS or Level 3. Also has some comparisons in different parts of the world.
I just tried a tracert on the DNS server my ISP (Roadrunner through TWC) uses, 209.18.47.61.Keep in mind, while Google runs its own backbone and has a very, VERY fast network, you'll be using servers likely 7 or more hops away from you to resolve DNS, as opposed to your ISPs DNS servers which should be no more than 2 hops away from you.
I'm currently using Level 3 DNS servers (4.2.2.1, 4.2.2.2).. wonder if this will speed it up. Will running a speedtest tell me, or will I just have to browse around to see if I can tell a difference?
I just tried a tracert on the DNS server my ISP (Roadrunner through TWC) uses, 209.18.47.61.
The 9th hop was to 65.24.7.12, so it wasn't even on the final network yet. After that it just timed out.
Hops to Google's 8.8.8.8 - 13.
Pingtimes to both averaged about 39ms.
Hops to Jeff7.com's nameservers - 19.
Moral of the story: Results my vary.![]()
I just pinged Comcast, Google, OpenDNS, and Level 3's DNS servers...
Level 3 was the fastest
Followed by OpenDNS
Comcast and Google were about the same.
I think I'll put one dns from google, one from opendns, and one from level 3 (assuming level 3 is free).
In fact, I just did. Judging by when I type in a mistyped URL, OpenDNS's page shows up first, I'll assume it's beating out google, comcast, and level 3 is responding. I hate openDNS's search engine, but comcast's is worse. I'm tempted to just put google as my dns just to get their search engine on mistyped urls.
I hope you realize it doesn't send the query to all name servers, only the first listed. It only tries the others if there is no reply.
I hope you realize it doesn't send the query to all name servers, only the first listed. It only tries the others if there is no reply.
~8ms from my isp vs ~16ms for Google. Fuuuck you goog, especially because the only reason you're doing this is to track me.
Doesn't every company have some type of tracking in place? I mean take free e-mail for example.....
You think Yahoo & Microsoft aren't doing similar things that say Gmail does?
Doesn't every company have some type of tracking in place? I mean take free e-mail for example.....
You sure? I put google first on purpose and opendns still returns results.
Allowing Google to handle DNS requests, rather than an ISP, will also mean that mistyped URLs will be redirected to a Google error page rather than an ISP-controlled one, on which the owner of the DNS server can place their own ads, PCMag.com software analyst Michael Muchmore noted.
Thanks for the idea :awe:What's sad is that after I posted that tidbit, it dawned on me that we'll likely be seeing that in sigs across the forum shortly. :\
