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Showing content with the highest reputation on 08/07/23 in all areas

  1. 1 point
    ScanFarer

    speedtest comparison

    In terms of client hardware, I got those speeds using my Windows desktop setup. The desktop has an i5 12400 processor, 16GB RAM, multiple m.2 drives/HDDs, and a 10G NIC. I'm also using Wireguard. What's funny is that when I used Mullvad previously, I achieved gigabit upload speeds with an old laptop with Linux that only had an i5-43100U and a decent SATA SSD. As for my network setup, everything is on a 10G connection – my ONT, router/firewall, and switch. I've set up a DIY Opnsense firewall/router with a 10G NIC. However, I'm currently limited to just a bit over gigabit speeds (1250 Download, 1050 Upload) since my ISP's plans go up to symmetrical gigabit speeds. Despite having the capability for symmetrical 10 Gigabit speeds using 10G EPON, they offer plans only up to gigabit speeds. My internet is residential fiber from Spectrum, which is unusual as they typically provide service via Docsis over coax. Interestingly, I used over half a petabyte of data over a few months with their service and didn't hear anything from them. It's quite funny considering I was expecting some sort of notice for excessive data usage, even though they don't enforce data caps.
  2. 1 point
    OpenSourcerer

    Eddie android client on f-droid

    It'd probably be interesting if airvpn.org/android/eddie/repo/ (or eddie.website/android/repo or something) pointed to an F-Droid-compatible repository. You could also automate deployment from GitLab (see link 2) and increase "trust" with official signatures (link 3) and builds being reproducible (link 4). Installation Nightly builds Signing Reproducible builds The repo I once hosted was a basic one built with fdroidserver (link 1), but the APKs there were simply official APKs enriched with some F-Droid metadata and manually dumped onto some webspace.
  3. 1 point
    Not true unless the mobile carrier somehow restricts or throttles UDP traffic. Generally UDP is far superior to TCP performancewise, mobile or not. And wireguard requires UDP and will not even connect if UDP is blocked by the carrier.
  4. 1 point
    Dear AirVPN Support, That worked perfectly! Thank you very much! Best Regards
  5. 1 point
    Staff

    ANSWERED AirVPN on mobile phone in China

    @itsmeprivately Hello! Please try the following settings (usually they are strictly necessary to bypass China blocks): switch to OpenVPN (if you haven't already done so) by tapping the icon "VPN Type" on the main view. Each tap switches between WireGuard and OpenVPN. force connection over TCP to port 443 in the following way: open "Settings" and expand "AirVPN" by tapping on it tap "Default OpenVPN protocol", select "TCP" and tap "OK" tap "Default OpenVPN port", select "443" and tap "OK" tap "Quick connection mode", select "Use default options only" and tap "OK" Finally test again connections to various servers in various locations. Kind regards
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