This entry was posted on Sunday, May 20th, 2007 at 8:24 pm and is filed under How To, Networking, Windows Tips. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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DNS – Domain Name Server/Service, is a service that translates domain names into IP addresses. Because domain names are alphabetic, they’re easier to remember. The Internet however, is really based on IP addresses. Every time you use a domain name, therefore, a DNS service must translate the name into the corresponding IP address. The DNS system is its own network. If one DNS server doesn’t know how to translate a particular domain name, it asks another one, and so on, until the correct IP address is returned. In fact, your ISP isn’t always that reliable, especially for Malaysian internet users which I personally get used to the lousy connection speed back in Malaysia. Perhaps you should really try on OpenDNS and FastCache; or test your internet speed with TCP/IQ Screenshots show the results before and after I went through the test At it’s core, FastCache really is a simple caching DNS proxy server – it speeds up your browsing by caching Web site domain addresses which sits between programs on your computer accessing the Internet and the DNS servers that map domain names to IP addresses. This means the first time you go to a certain domain/website, it takes the normal amount of time to look up the domain name, but each subsequent time you return should be instant (as long as it remains in the cache). But what good is saving a FRACTION of a second!?!? In and of itself, not of much value at all, but the beauty of DNS is that you don’t normally just make a couple of requests a day – with normal browsing you can literally make hundreds of requests, and that starts to add up. :::Configuring your computer::: Read Others: |
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One Response to “OpenDNS and FastCache: Speed Up Internet Connection”
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June 15th, 2007 at 11:13 pm
This program doesn’t work on my computers (win2k).
Says I can’t use a IP starting with 127.
Oh well.