Disclaimer Because This VIdeo Is Incorrect Wih Most Information: - DNS itself doesn't increase internet speed but can improve website load times by resolving domain names faster. - A faster DNS provider may reduce latency in name resolution, making browsing feel quicker. This means your internet is not faster but pages do load quicker. That is what I meant with this video. Thank you so much for the comments!
Your understanding of DNS is mistaken. DNS does not effect download speed or pings. A faster DNS server will allow you to resolve the Domain name you try to visit faster. Once resolved your internet connection and the servers bandwidth will be what effects your internet connection speed. IE when you do a speed test. DNS is used to resolve the speed test server IP *if* a domain name is used to reach the server you are testing on. But it most likely is direct IP to keep delays to a minimum. The Ping times are calculated round time for a packet to reach the server and you to get the response reply packet. This is tested under idle (the first ping test) download and then during an upload. This can tell you if there is a bottleneck in communication. Finally the upload and download are direct TCP/IP communication with the IP of the server. DNS does not effect this at all. What will effect it, is your own home WiFi version, signal quality throughput, your internet connection, or just the load on the server at the time you ran the test. Hint you are not the only one running speed tests on that server at that exact time. You can try a different server and get a different result.
Disclaimer Because This VIdeo Is Incorrect Wih Most Information:
- DNS itself doesn't increase internet speed but can improve website load times by resolving domain names faster.
- A faster DNS provider may reduce latency in name resolution, making browsing feel quicker.
This means your internet is not faster but pages do load quicker. That is what I meant with this video. Thank you so much for the comments!
Your understanding of DNS is mistaken. DNS does not effect download speed or pings. A faster DNS server will allow you to resolve the Domain name you try to visit faster. Once resolved your internet connection and the servers bandwidth will be what effects your internet connection speed. IE when you do a speed test. DNS is used to resolve the speed test server IP *if* a domain name is used to reach the server you are testing on. But it most likely is direct IP to keep delays to a minimum. The Ping times are calculated round time for a packet to reach the server and you to get the response reply packet. This is tested under idle (the first ping test) download and then during an upload. This can tell you if there is a bottleneck in communication.
Finally the upload and download are direct TCP/IP communication with the IP of the server. DNS does not effect this at all. What will effect it, is your own home WiFi version, signal quality throughput, your internet connection, or just the load on the server at the time you ran the test. Hint you are not the only one running speed tests on that server at that exact time. You can try a different server and get a different result.
a faster DNS server can reduce the time it takes to resolve domain names, making websites load slightly faster.
Dude, where did you get your computer education from?
Craiglist, but a dns makes the pages load quicker not the speed of the internet. I was probably dreaming 😆
@DyfonusHowTo
Your trying to compare apple to oranges.
Depending on a user's location, other DNS providers will likely impact your results.
Yes of course a faster dns is a faster resolver of which websites we visit so the page loads quicker
I scan 4800 dns and keep 50. Then select the best speed/delay.
Cool!
How do you scan them?