Why does FAST.com focus primarily on download speed? Download speed is most relevant for people who are consuming content on the Internet, and we want FAST.com to be a very simple and fast speed test.

I am from a country where internet is still rather slow. However, accessing Netflix is so fast, that youtube.com is not even that fast. Does Netflix use some technologies that makes it so fast? What is the difference?


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Hi all, I've been using Plex for a little bit now and have a decent library. I'm taking a trip and was downloading some movies/shows for the plane and noticed the download speeds from my server are pretty awful, especially compared to Netflix. Now, I know what you're going to say, "Netflix has a lot more computing power than you of course it's faster". The Plex server I'm running has plenty of power for transcoding, network, etc and streaming works perfectly fine, and this difference is pretty significant...

Hi, I was wondering if anyone knows how I can access the rewind and fast forward functions in Netflix on an Apple TV. Like the ones in the iOS app where I can fast forward or rewind 10 seconds, and the track position slider.

Any help would be great,

Cheers,

Hubert

Hi there!

Unfortunately, it's not that easy to rewind and fastforward with Netflix. I have found it sometimes works to hold down the select button and drag your finger left or right. Let it wait for a couple seconds, and press the play/pause button. This usually rewinds it about ten seconds or so, though it's not consistent. I have struggled with the same thing for awhile now. I hope this helps somewhat anyway.

Hey,

I don't know how you call the buttons on the remote but......

From the track-pad, the button on the left, the one before the Siri button brings up the controls to fast forward, play and such. Then you flick your finger right to fast-forward, and left to rewind.

The more you flick, the faster it goes. Voice Over tells you how fast its going. You can flick back to slow down the rewinding or fast forwarding, until it says play. That's when you stop moving your finger on the track-pad and wait a few seconds for it to catch up and start playing. If it doesn't play, then you can press the play button.

Yes, it is possible to fast-forward and rewind Netflix online content up to three different speeds. Depending on the product, use the left arrow and right arrow buttons or the fast-forward or rewind buttons on the remote control. Each time one of these buttons is pressed, the fast-forward or rewind speed changes. The Netflix video screen does not show navigation controls for streamed movies, you can still go to a particular section of a movie using the buttons shown in red below on the keypad remote control.

"We all want a faster, better internet, yet internet speeds vary greatly and can be affected by other users on your network or congestion with your internet service provider," said David Fullagar, Netflix's VP of content delivery, in a blog post in May. "When you're experiencing streaming issues, fast.com allows you to check the download speeds you're getting from your ISP."

Fast.com works like other tools such as Speedtest.net to show users how fast their internet connection is in megabits per second. It differs from Netflix's existing ISP Speed Index, which is a "measure of prime time Netflix performance on particular ISPs", rather than a measure of personal internet performance.

The streaming giant has reportedly partnered with DreamWorks and Universal to create an animated TV series set in the same universe as the Fast and Furious movies. The family-friendly show will follow a teenager, Tony Toretto, who shares his cousin Dom's proclivity for fast cars. Tony is recruited, along with several friends, to go undercover and "infiltrate an elite racing league serving as a front for a nefarious crime organization bent on world domination."

Yes, this is certainly the most obvious, but when was the last time you asked your provider how fast its offerings are now? If it's been a few years, it likely has new services (maybe even fiber) that could greatly increase your download speeds. Recently I switched from 250Mbps cable to 1Gbps fiber for $10 less a month. When I canceled the cable internet they said "Oh, we can reduce your rate by $30 a month, or increase your speeds for the same money." They, of course, never offered that without me saying I was canceling. Just something to keep in mind.

This is definitely the first place to start. If you stay with the same provider, usually it'll be able to flip the proverbial switch without sending a tech to visit your home. Afterward, you'll have faster internet. If you switch providers (from cable to fiber, for example), the new provider will probably have to send someone to your house to install it.

A new or different router might also give you the option to connect via the 5GHz range ("normal" Wi-Fi is 2.4GHz). 5GHz is generally faster and has less chance of interference from other devices. It doesn't go through walls as effectively. Our favorite all-around budget option is the TP-Link Archer AX21.

Although convenient, Wi-Fi can be quite slow on some networks, especially if multiple people are streaming at once. Wired internet, aka Ethernet, is a lot faster and doesn't have issues with walls, interference or distance (well, not in a house, anyway). Though running wires can be annoying, it provides the most reliable connection and can be worth doing on your main TV at least.

Unlike previous DreamWorks Animation series, the Netflix deal allowed DreamWorks to maintain creative control. Prynoski said: "Typically, if you are working on a show like this, you might get two sets of notes: one from DreamWorks and one from the network. But we don't get notes from Netflix, which is cool. It allows us to move faster, and we can make the shows, hopefully, the way we want them."[8]

You basically need supercharged internet to keep a 4K stream flowing without it getting bogged down by the spinning wheel of death. But you can bulk up your broadband speed with a fiber internet plan. Fiber gives you the fastest and most reliable type of internet connection, and even baseline plans get you super-smooth speeds.

The mobile version was an entirely different story. While the test loads even faster than it does on the desktop version at a lean 0.8 seconds, the test itself took quite a bit longer, at 49.9 seconds. Much more importantly, the results were terribly inaccurate, with an average download speed of just 104 Mbps and an upload speed of 5.6 Mbps.

This documentary talks about the most serious, and perhaps the most worrying, consequence of fast fashion, the water pollution. It follows river conservationist Mark Angelo for three years, as he takes a journey around the world to document the devastating impact the fashion industry has had on our water resources. To put things into perspective, it takes about 2,700 litres of water to produce one cotton shirt. That amount of water is enough to sustain a human being for almost three years. This documentary reveals the bleak state of our most necessary resource because of the repeated contamination by the fast fashion industry through toxic dyes and chemicals and hazardous materials that get dumped in the wastelands and are not biodegradable.

UK-based filmmaker, Meghna Gupta takes us to the place where the clothes that people got for a bargain end up being discarded and introduces us to the men and women who recycle this waste. The movie explores a recycling facility in India where discarded fast fashion from the West comes to get sustainably disposed off. Gupta gives a platform to the factory workers to talk about their experiences to give us an idea of the impact being non-sustainable with fashion makes on the world around us. The workers come up with stories and reasons as to why the people in the West would discard so many clothes, coming to the conclusion that there must be a water shortage in that part of the world because nobody has apparently heard of washing their clothes and reusing them.

Suppose a person, who has streamed rom-coms exclusively with their significantother, suddenly breaks up.Consider an expecting mom, who has shopped for baby clothes, miscarries.Their streaming and shopping recommendations, however, do not necessarily update, serving as unhappy reminders of their loss.One approach is to implement the Right To Be Forgotten for recommendation systems built from user data, with the goal of updating downstream recommendations to reflect the removal without incurring the cost of re-training.Inspired by solutions to the original Netflix challenge~\citep{koren2009bellkor}, we develop Unlearn-ALS, which is more aggressively forgetful of select data than fine-tuning. In theory, it is consistent with retraining without model degradation. Empirically, it shows fast convergence, and can be applied directly to any bi-linear models regardless of the training procedure. ff782bc1db

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