Bandwith Restrictions

<p>Just wondering...</p>

<p>I'll be living at Bromly in a few weeks and I supposedly have 250mb to use per day. I can't do ANYTHING with 250mbs, so, wondering if anyone knows of ways to bypass or if DC++ is used. Thanks.</p>

<p>I've been wondering about this too. Maybe, it's a typo or something. Hopefully, it's not too bad.</p>

<p>I am pretty sure University Housing gets 750mb. I live at Hendrick House and i get 1GB per day. Still not enough IMO. Last year everyone MAC switched at HH and they cracked down lol. There are other ways however people generally dont reveal them in fear of it getting widespread and banned. I would think anyone who is a CS major and watchs alot of tv shows or anime would know a trick or two. <em>wink</em></p>

<p>It says on the Bromley's website that you only get 250 mbs. a day. If you cross that limit, you won't have net access for 24 hours. :(</p>

<p>There are other places to access the internet on your laptop, right?</p>

<p>Wow that is sad. Never knew Bromley had such a low limit. You can go online at the library etc. Some ports are blocked however. Maybe you can sneak in a cable modem and share the cost via a router.</p>

<p>Thanks. That might be the best way to get online for downloading and etc. :)</p>

<p>I just made a post about this but the new limits took effect this weekend.</p>

<p>They used to be 750 both ways total, then rate limited to dial up speed.</p>

<p>Now its 2000 both ways, rate limited to DSL speeds till 5000 then rate limited to still-faster than dial up speeds.</p>

<p>Its much better this way and has a little breathing room</p>

<p>"Now its 2000 both ways, rate limited to DSL speeds till 5000 then rate limited to still-faster than dial up speeds."</p>

<p>? I don't get what this means your wording is a bit wierd. This means in the 6-pack, we'll have 2 Gigs per day max? Cause that would be great news.</p>