I have DSL with only .67 mbps upload speed and lots of large video files to upload. Sprint cellular is being shown with an upload speed of about 4 mbps and it seems to me that using my smart phone to upload the files would be more efficient.
I know that 1 to 3 GB video files are going to take a LONG time to upload either way, but a faster speed would help a lot.
I would like to test this somehow, but I’m not sure how to do it. Uploading to Youtube was my first thpought, but it seems to me that Youtube will do some processing or compression on any videos that I upload and thus skewing results.
I can’t upload to my ultimate destination as a test because of reasons too long to go into.
Can anyone think of a way to test upload speeds in a way that makes sense?
You could dump a large file into Drop Box or some other cloud-based storage thing. I dunno, maybe a coffee shop or something has a better connection than either. Those are both pretty bad.
I’m not sure you’re going to be able to do much more testing than just using one of the speed test services given your constraints.
Be careful about cellular data though. Even the unlimited services sometimes have consequences for lots of data transfer. You may end up with throttled speeds for a while after heavy use. You should check what Sprint’s policies are.
I wouldn’t be surprised if your cell connection was ‘deprioritized’ during heavy use, but it you’ve got lots of files, why not just send some by each method?
Could you maybe drop the files on a flash drive and take them to the local library or somewhere else that has faster upload speeds? 0.67 megabits/sec is VERY slow.
That was a very good suggestion. I took my laptop to my local library and checked their wifi speed and saw upload of about 8mbps or so just sitting in their parking lot.
If they are on the phone then just upload to Dropbox or somesuch. Easily done. You said you have unlimited data. Send a few at a time and do it when you do not expect to be using your phone for other purposes.
If the files are on your PC you can transfer to the phone (assuming your phone has sufficient storage) and do the above but, honestly, I’d just set a bunch to upload before you go to bed. Your upload speed is painfully slow but who cares if it happens while you sleep?
The only real reason to get it uploaded faster is if time is a factor (e.g. you are a reporter, videoed a protest and the evening news needs it in 20 minutes).
Some smartphones and some carriers allow you to switch to your home WiFi network for calls. I have Verizon and a Pixel 4 and I can do this and it works flawlessly.
Of course, this assumes you have good WiFi coverage in your place (which I do).
Basically, all your calls, all anything you do with your phone at home, is handled via your home WiFi.
You do not need to do anything special either. Assuming you have WiFi at home you just tell your phone to use that and poof…done.
Without that I would be screwed…I get pretty much no bars in my place…kinda iffy at best. With the home WiFi handling calls I have zero problems.
Yeah they offered us the gizmo a few years back, for a low monthly fee of course. We have DSL thus a landline. The landline concept worked for a hundred years. We can deal with it.
FWIW I have no “gizmo” beyond my WiFi router (which I would have anyway). I am guessing the gizmo is a cell extender…thing. Those are expensive.
They are trying to sell you shit you don’t need. You can do WiFi calls if you have WiFi in your home. At least some providers allow that. They are thrilled to let you use your own equipment and not their cell towers.
Again, I suppose each provider does their own thing on this and doubtless many want to dig more money out of you if they can. I have Verizon which, while not the cheapest cell provider out there, allows this as part of their service.
I think it would be worth your time to investigate what options you have in this area. Even with DSL your cell calls will be perfect if your provider provides this. DSL is plenty fast for voice comms.
NOTE: Your phone and cell provider need to support this. Some phones will not give you the option. It’s a lot of fuss, I know, but once sorted it’s great if you have really bad cell reception where you are.