Below is a picture of Jerry from Giganews’ design department with his Giganews t shirt on at the Angkor Wat temple in Siem Riep, Cambodia. Jerry snapped this photograph on his trip to Bien Hoa, Vietnam to visit family. Thanks Jerry for the cool pic!
Search Results for: usenet
SSL Can Increase Your Download Speeds
Giganews recently announced the deployment of Encrypted Usenet Access. This service enables Giganews customers to transfer all authentication, header, and article data over an SSL encrypted connection.
The obvious benefits of this service are increased security, anonymity, and privacy; however, there seems to be one more…
Securing your connection with SSL typically slows down your download speeds. The reason for this is that it takes a little bit of extra time and CPU power to encrypt and decrypt the data on each end. This extra latency in turn decreases your throughput rate; however, many of Giganews’ customers are actually reporting faster download speeds.
How can this be?
SSL encryption helps beat ISP traffic shaping!
Through Giganews’ newsgroups and support lists we have seen that many ISPs have implemented traffic shaping measures over the last year to curb usage on their networks.
This is typically done at the protocol or port level. For example, if your ISP wanted to curb your newsgroup usage, they could say that any traffic being transferred over the NNTP protocol on port 119 cannot exceed 500 kilobits per second per customer.
In the past the best work around for this problem was switching to port 80 (typically used for HTTP), but if your ISP is filtering on the protocol level (all NNTP traffic for example) switching to port 80 would not do you any good. Your ISP might be looking for NNTP commands and limit your connection when it sees them.
This is where SSL comes in.
Because SSL is encrypting the authentication, header, article, and protocol data passed between your computer and Giganews any protocol-based filtering measures will be ineffective. The speed difference can be very dramatic. Many Giganews customers have already commented that downloading over SSL has made a huge improvement in their Usenet performance.
If you’ve recently experienced slow download speeds with any NNTP based downloading (Giganews or other) which you suspect is being caused by ISP traffic shaping, try out our new encrypted Usenet service to see if you can get around it.
If you’re a new customer, you can try out our 3 day free trial. If you’re already an existing Giganews customer, log on to your control panel and select “Manage Service” for special offers just for you.
We’re glad so many of our customers are seeing this additional benefit to our SSL service, and we’re looking forward to offering even more advanced tools to improve your Giganews experience. If you have any other tips for avoiding troublesome traffic shaping, leave us a comment!
Newsgroups, Grupos de noticias, Nieuwsgroepen, Groupes de discussion
We were reviewing some of the comments on our last blog post Newsgroups vs. Usenet and we were reminded of a question we’ve been asking ourselves for the last 3 months or so….
“What do people who speak languages other than English use to reference Usenet related terms?”
Listed below is a breakdown of several popular Usenet related terms and the terms provided by our translation company. Are these accurate? Do you just use the English version? Feel free to comment with your thoughts….
Newsgroup
French – groupe de discussion
German – newsgroup
Dutch – nieuwsgroep
Spanish – grupo de noticias
Newsgroups
French – groupes de discussion
German – newsgroups
Dutch – nieuwsgroepen
Spanish – grupos de noticias
News Server
French – serveur de nouvelles
German – nachrichten server
Dutch – nieuwsserver
Spanish – servidor de noticias
Giganews’ first blog post!
Welcome to the Giganews blog. This is a corporate blog set up to keep our customers up to date on everything going on at Giganews. We’ll be posting on our own experiences using Giganews and other Usenet related technologies.
Take advantage of our RSS/Atom feeds and social bookmarking features to keep up to date and spread the word.