
Install Wim Tweak Exede
Technology News - 15minutenews.com. JanetShim in Georgetown, California said: I work for a company that is looking for Exede Installers to work as a sub-contractor. We need installers nationwide. If you are looking for work, please message me. I am a certified Exede techmician looking for work. I am very interested. Please message me with contact info.
Even if you think you’ve had enough of 2016, there’s going to be one more second added at the very end. And it will affect your Exede or WildBlue internet service. Here’s what’s going on: The earth’s spin is not constant.
Atomic clocks — which tell us the time, set television broadcast frequencies and communicate with GPS satellites — must be periodically adjusted to sync with the earth’s rotation. This little tweak is called a “leap second,” and the world’s timekeepers have added this second every few years since 1972. The next leap second change will occur on Dec. 31, at 5 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. (More precisely, it’ll be at 23:59:60 UTC, or Coordinated Universal Time.) What does this mean for you? Viasat, provider of Exede and Wildblue Internet, must also add a leap second to the clocks for the devices that provide your internet service.
Our Network Operations Center in Denver will take care of this on Jan. 3-4 by resetting your modem.
This will cause a service interruption between 11 p.m. Mountain Time Jan. The interruption will likely be between 15 minutes and 1 hour. In addition to your internet service, you may notice other impacts of the leap second. Financial markets, GPS services and other areas that rely on time and computers may also be affected.
I am on a 12 Mbps Freedom plan. Normally in the daytime, I get around 15 Mbps, evenings around 8 Mbps. On Christmas day, at 11 a.m.

I was still getting 8, by 2 p.m. It was down to 4, and by evening, it varied between 1 and 2.5. Rukovodstvo poljzovatelya yokogawa aq7275.
Yesterday was a bit improved, but today it is back to around 12 Mbps. I have plenty of priority data left, but it was very obvious that the new devices, along with the people being off work and school, along with holiday visitors, that the network was being stressed. Nothing new, it happens every year during the holiday season. I've only been with ViaSat about six weeks, but as a Comm Tech since 1958 working every facet of it there is, I was aware before I signed on, that slow downs WILL occur in the evening hours. And especially this week with the kiddies getting their little IT toys, and the bigger kids getting their big tablets and Super High Powered Game boxes, it is going to be slow. It is 1930 hours as I type this, and ran this just a few minutes ago. I'm on the Bronze plan, bottom of the ladder, so I feel that ViaSat is doing pretty damn well, considering how much Network Congestion is going on right now.
More like long time customers being honest about our service. We just happen to read contracts and, the other information Viasat makes available to us and, have realistic expectations of our service. I don't expect 25 Mbps 24/7 regardless of congestion, weather and what not. I expect an internet connection that will allow me to get email, load a web page and stream SD video 75%+ of the time. I expect latency of 600+ at all times and, I expect there will be times of heavy congestion on my beam that will totally tank my speed for a few hours, making streaming impossible. I expect to loose connectivity during storms at my home or, at my gateway and, I expect occasional (1-2 times per year) technical difficulties causing down time.