![]() Somebody else shows up with a broken arm? They get a doctor too (but if it’s getting really busy pretty soon people are sharing doctors and nobody is getting particularly speedy care). Someone just got run over by a truck? They get a doctor immediately too. Accidentally shot your hand with a nail gun during a DIY project? You get a doctor immediately. On a normal network, the triage nurse is indifferent to the condition of the incoming patients and simply assigns them to any available doctors, progressively spreading the staff of the hospital thinner and thinner with no regard for the severity of the patient’s situation. The patients are the different applications, and the triage nurse is the router. It may help to think about Quality of Service like this: Let’s pretend, for a moment, that your Internet connection is a hospital where the available bandwidth is the number of doctors available to treat patients. Quality of Service is an excellent and underutilized tool that allows you to train your router to divvy up your available bandwidth between applications. With good QoS rules, you can ensure that your streaming video doesn’t stutter because a big file is downloading at the same time, or that your work laptop isn’t sluggish when you’re trying to meet that last minute deadline while your kids are playing games online. ![]() ![]() The Quality of Service feature on your router lets you prioritize the things you care about, so they happen faster than the things you don’t. Streaming HD video or having a stutter-free Skype call is probably more important to you than downloading a big file. ![]()
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December 2022
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