
Optimize 7 Critical Internet
Settings
Your Internet Speed Will
Increase 300% GUARANTEED!
What settings does Web Speed Accelerator Adjust?
There are 7 main TCP settings in the
windows operating system that determine how your computer
receives data from the internet, how it processes that
data, and what happens in the case the data was faulty.
Accelerator 2000 will fix and adjust all of these settings
to performance levels for you with a click of a button!
RWIN ( Receive Window ):
This setting determines how much data the
receiving computer is about to receive.
Too much RWIN will result in data loss, as the packets are
lost or damaged. Too little RWIN will be very slow,
because each packet will need to be verified that it was
received before the next is sent. The "ideal" formula of
the RWIN is to take your latency, multiply that by your
speed, divide by 8, and add a buffer of 20% for slow
data. Accelerator 2000 does this for you with one click.
MTU ( Maximum Transmission Unit ):
This is how big of a packet of data you can
receive (dial-up modem & broadband). If the packet has a
smaller MTU than the packets frame length, separation and
fragmentation will occur. Accelerator 2000 will adjust your MTU
for a nice fit.
MSS ( Maximum Segment Size ):
This defines the largest amount of TCP data
that the Winsock is about to receive. This setting should
be somewhere in the range of 40 less than the MTU for
variance reasons (Windows
calculates this automatically from the Maximum MTU
number). Accelerator 2000 will automatically adjust your
target MSS and then assign the performance value.
Black Hole Detection:
This setting will detect a black hole in
the connection router when it's doing the MTU Path
Discovery. Black Holes don't return ICMP Destination
Unreachable messages when it needs to do a fragment on an
IP DataGram with the Don't Fragment bit set. When this
happens, TCP depends
on these messages to perform the Path MTU Discovery.
Accelerator 2000 will stop it.
When this feature is enabled, the TCP will try to send a
segment without the Don't Fragment bit set if several
retransmissions of the segment go unacknowledged. If the
segment gets acknowledged, the MSS is decreased and the
Don't Fragment bit will be set in future packets. This is
desired, because doing the Black Hole detection will
increase the maximum number of retransmissions performed
on a given segment. Accelerator 2000 does this for you.
TTL ( Time To Live ):
This is a number in a IP Data Packet that
tells the router whether or not the packet has been in a
network for too long, and should be discarded. Packets may
not get delivered for many reasons to their destinations
in a reasonable amount of time. A combination of faulty
routing tables could cause packets to loop forever.
Discarding the looping packet is a solution, then
resending it. Initially, the TTL value is set in a 8 bit
binary packet header. Originally, it was set in seconds,
and when it became exhausted, the packet gets discarded. Each router
is required to subtract one value off the TTL field,
that means the amount of router hops the packet is
allowed to do before it's discarded. Windows default is 32
hops, Accelerator 2000er will set this to 128 for maximum
coverage.
Selective Acknowledgements: ( SACKS )
This improves the throughput in lines that
lose packets, by retransmitting the lost packets at faster
intervals, they reach their destination faster, with more
precision. When you purchase Accelerator 2000, 1 click and
this is all set.
Maximize Simultaneous Web Connections (
MSWC )
The maximum number of simultaneous
connections your computer is allowed to handle.
Optimizing this setting to just the right amount, will
grant your computer the utmost best performance. Setting
this at too many will result in a overload.
Accelerator 2000 will adjust this value accordingly for you.
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