Geekzone: technology news, blogs, forums
Guest
Welcome Guest.
You haven't logged in yet. If you don't have an account you can register now.


View this topic in a long page with up to 500 replies per page Create new topic
1 | 2 
lchiu7
6459 posts

Uber Geek

Trusted

  #599927 25-Mar-2012 22:25
Send private message

A question from somebody who is not so knowledgeable in this area. If your ISP uses a transparent proxy, does it really matter then what DNS you put in your router since they will ignore it and use their own DNS resolution?

This breaks proxy services like unblock-us usually. But even with their transparent proxy I have noticed that on TCL at least, when a different proxy address is specified, some of the CDN's are really slow. The Herald is one such example which performs really slow when the proxy server in my router is not set to the TCL ones.




Staying in Wellington. Check out my AirBnB in the Wellington CBD.  https://www.airbnb.co.nz/h/wellycbd  PM me and mention GZ to get a 15% discount and no AirBnB charges.


 
 
 

Trade NZ and US shares and funds with Sharesies (affiliate link).
Ragnor
8185 posts

Uber Geek

Trusted

  #600154 26-Mar-2012 12:06
Send private message

exportgoldman:
freitasm: Not being mean, but being mean... Probably someone who (wrongly) decided to use Google DNS or OpenDNS thinking they would greatly improve performance for the company.



+1 Such a common problem for IT guys which don't understand DNS and start messing around. I see this quite a bit.  

Nothing like sucking out Windows Updates from Spain at 20KB/s :-)


Quite normal for a small/medium size business to have it's own dns servers as many are running SBS or AD servers, just a matter or not putting something silly in the forwarders.

nickt
89 posts

Master Geek


  #600170 26-Mar-2012 12:22
Send private message

FYI, you can also hit CDN problems if you use a VPN. eg if DNS resolution takes place at the far end of the tunnel, but the web traffic isn't routed that way too. One way to avoid that is to use search domains to limit DNS resolution to just the subset that are on the VPN. The VPN server should be configured to do this but if it's not you can work around it on your own machine.

1 | 2 
View this topic in a long page with up to 500 replies per page Create new topic





News and reviews »

Samsung 9100 Pro NVMe SSD Review
Posted 11-Apr-2025 13:11


Motorola Announces New Mid-tier Phones moto g05 and g15
Posted 4-Apr-2025 00:00


SoftMaker Releases Free PDF editor FreePDF 2025
Posted 3-Apr-2025 15:26


Moto G85 5G Review
Posted 30-Mar-2025 11:53


Ring Launches New AI-Powered Smart Video Search
Posted 27-Mar-2025 16:30


OPPO RENO13 Series Launches in New Zealand
Posted 27-Mar-2025 05:00


Sony Electronics Announces the WF-C710N Truly Wireless Noise Cancelling Earbuds
Posted 26-Mar-2025 20:37


New Harman Kardon Portable Home Speakers Bring Performance and Looks Together
Posted 26-Mar-2025 20:30


Data Insight Launches The Data Academy
Posted 26-Mar-2025 20:21


Oclean AirPump A10 Portable Water Flosser Wins iF Design Award 2025
Posted 20-Mar-2025 12:05


OPPO Find X8 Pro Review
Posted 14-Mar-2025 14:59


Samsung Galaxy Ring Now Available in New Zealand
Posted 14-Mar-2025 13:52


2degrees Announces Partnership With AST SpaceMobile and Plans for NZ Launch
Posted 11-Mar-2025 10:05


Samsung Introduces New Galaxy A56 5G, Galaxy A36 5G and Galaxy A26 5G
Posted 9-Mar-2025 12:18


Cricut Unveils the Next Generation of Smart Cutting Machines
Posted 9-Mar-2025 12:06









Geekzone Live »

Try automatic live updates from Geekzone directly in your browser, without refreshing the page, with Geekzone Live now.



Are you subscribed to our RSS feed? You can download the latest headlines and summaries from our stories directly to your computer or smartphone by using a feed reader.