- Jul 18, 2003
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I am having problems streaming UHD video on Vudu through my Roku Streaming Stick and XBox One S game console, and also seeing significant throughput decreases and ping increases when accessing Netflix servers. Whenever my network connects to Netflix servers through fast.com or I try and stream UHD video through Vudu (HDX seems to work fine), my entire connection sees a throughput decrease of about 50-75% (from ~80Mbps to around 20-40Mbps) and ping increases from ~20ms to 50-60ms across the entire Internet connection as monitored in real time on my desktop or laptop.
The Roku stick is getting a solid 30-40Mbps connection wirelessly, and my XBox One S is hard wired and getting the full 80+ Mbps when running their respective Internet connection tests while not doing any streaming. From my desktop computer, I can run a speed test on fast.com (owned by Netflix), wait for the connection to cease by monitoring my Ethernet connection through the Windows task manager, and watch in real time as my speedtest.net throughput directly to AT&T's servers gets cut as mentioned above. Is there some traffic shaping going on when accessing streaming video through AT&T, as this only seems to happen when using streaming video services (Steam and other gaming clients, file downloads, Google Drive, etc. all work at full speed)? Regardless of the reason, I'm unable to reliably stream video at higher bitrates (I should only need 25Mbps or so per stream), so any assistance I can get with this issue would be appreciated if there's something I'm missing here.
The Roku stick is getting a solid 30-40Mbps connection wirelessly, and my XBox One S is hard wired and getting the full 80+ Mbps when running their respective Internet connection tests while not doing any streaming. From my desktop computer, I can run a speed test on fast.com (owned by Netflix), wait for the connection to cease by monitoring my Ethernet connection through the Windows task manager, and watch in real time as my speedtest.net throughput directly to AT&T's servers gets cut as mentioned above. Is there some traffic shaping going on when accessing streaming video through AT&T, as this only seems to happen when using streaming video services (Steam and other gaming clients, file downloads, Google Drive, etc. all work at full speed)? Regardless of the reason, I'm unable to reliably stream video at higher bitrates (I should only need 25Mbps or so per stream), so any assistance I can get with this issue would be appreciated if there's something I'm missing here.