I was actually online gaming but I've noticed that when something happens on the larger networks its often reflected in how the connection reacts as a whole... Everyone in the game got hit by a huge spike of varying lengths at essentially the same time. Based on my experience it was the type of lag spike that reflects the overall web having some sort of hiccup
the way that happened to all 10 players at the same time but of different lenghts of disconnection indicated to me that it was a web wide spike, not just a single person's internet. I made this post to see if anyone had any more info
https://downdetector.com/
T-Mobile and Verizon services just had a hit.
Others as well, but not as bad.
Edit: Reading comments, it's coming from a lot of New York and New England (NorthEast US) areas.
Please explain
I was actually online gaming but I've noticed that when something happens on the larger networks its often reflected in how the connection reacts as a whole... Everyone in the game got hit by a huge spike of varying lengths at essentially the same time. Based on my experience it was the type of lag spike that reflects the overall web having some sort of hiccup
Wouldn’t that be a lag dip
High info post
lag happens all the time. everyones on different internet. for example, im paying for 600 megabits internet but i only get on avg 8 megabits down
the way that happened to all 10 players at the same time but of different lenghts of disconnection indicated to me that it was a web wide spike, not just a single person's internet. I made this post to see if anyone had any more info
The keyword in the fine print is *”up to”
Interesting... Like what happened for say?