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09/11/2011 07:29 kotarou3#16
Why would it though? Isn't it increasing the distance to reach the server?
09/11/2011 07:31 xlogic#17
No, it's make it as if you live in Los Angeles, which is where Nexon HQ is.
09/11/2011 10:50 kotarou3#18
But I thought teleportation on that scale isn't developed that well yet D:!
09/11/2011 18:22 anthonyjr2#19
Quote:
Originally Posted by kotarou3 View Post
But I thought teleportation on that scale isn't developed that well yet D:!
I don't understand exactly what this does either, but eh, my ping is alright so not really necessary.
09/11/2011 18:51 Russia.rkly#20
I thought it was just routing through less hops.
09/12/2011 12:51 cloudkiller2006#21
it creates a tunnel to it, best shown in pictures:
ASCII art 1: normal connection

o------>O
^
|
o<-----[]


ASCII art 2: connection with WTFast

O
^
|
[]

o are connection points
O is what you want to reach
[] is where you start


as you can see, it makes it go straight to a certain point, instead of through whatever's available. this is called a tunnel.
09/12/2011 14:02 kotarou3#22
But how does a program on the user's PC manipulate the physical connection?
09/12/2011 15:42 lithiumbrew#23
Quote:
Originally Posted by kotarou3 View Post
But how does a program on the user's PC manipulate the physical connection?
This. How does using proxy close to the server magically going to give me west cost ping if im physically thousands of miles away from the server?
09/13/2011 08:14 cloudkiller2006#24
Quote:
Originally Posted by lithiumbrew View Post
This. How does using proxy close to the server magically going to give me west cost ping if im physically thousands of miles away from the server?
Quote:
Originally Posted by cloudkiller2006 View Post
as you can see, it makes it go straight to a certain point, instead of through whatever's available. this is called a tunnel.
imagine trying to cross the ocean. its faster to just take a tunnel then to drive around it, no?

it makes your computer connect in a straight line, thus speeding up your connection a lot more. it doesn't PHYSICALLY move your computer but still gives a similar effect because you don't have to make hundreds of detours.

on a sidenote: it appears that WTFast shares info with 3rd parties, so i don't suggest using it. unverified information tho.
09/13/2011 09:05 LtGeneral Andrew#25
This may cause some problems with ISP traffic shaping too.
This may not improve speed either.
Even though the distance is cut, the routing of the data may not be sent through the proper lines as to gain maximum speed.
Honestly, manual rerouting would be much better.
09/13/2011 11:16 kotarou3#26
Quote:
Originally Posted by cloudkiller2006 View Post
it makes your computer connect in a straight line, thus speeding up your connection a lot more. it doesn't PHYSICALLY move your computer but still gives a similar effect because you don't have to make hundreds of detours.
But doesn't every node themselves determine which node to send data to next? I thought the end-user doesn't have any control over the path the data takes - the nodes themselves determine the route depending on traffic conditions
09/13/2011 18:53 KevSmash#27
I will give you the benefit of the doubt and we will assume WTFast actually does reduce latency.

It would be faster if a faster protocol than TCP was used. TCP is very wasteful, although it is rather reliable once the stream starts. if WTFast connects your machine to it's server with UDP then translates and forwards the data to Nexon's servers using TCP it has an incredible potential to decrease latency.

I think it has potential. But then again, that's just a theory. I actually have no idea what WTFast does and clearly neither does the person who started this thread.

lol... teleport my magic shit yo... quantum entanglement WTF...... FAST.

Also, it clearly has nothing to do with picking the correct route. You're retarded-wrong. That's what IP is for.
09/13/2011 21:01 harrybong1#28
z.z It makes you faster.... But it gets detected as a hacking tool :)
09/13/2011 21:05 Russia.rkly#29
Quote:
Originally Posted by kotarou3 View Post
I thought the end-user doesn't have any control over the path the data takes
:/
09/13/2011 22:09 xlogic#30
How come I'm not detected. :I