Throttling Bandwidth on Firefox
I currently use Firefox as my browser, and saw there was an add-on called "Firefox Throttle" that would limit my bandwidth usage for me. As I am on an overall low data cap from my ISP, I wanted to use this plugin, but found it was outdated and broken. What other way can I limit my bandwidth?
I am using Windows 7 x64
windows-7 firefox bandwidth
add a comment |
I currently use Firefox as my browser, and saw there was an add-on called "Firefox Throttle" that would limit my bandwidth usage for me. As I am on an overall low data cap from my ISP, I wanted to use this plugin, but found it was outdated and broken. What other way can I limit my bandwidth?
I am using Windows 7 x64
windows-7 firefox bandwidth
Bandwidth, or data cap? Your ISP telling you that you can only use 30GB per month is a data cap, your connection being rated at 10Mbps is a bandwidth limit.
– Darth Android
Jun 15 '11 at 0:01
I have a data cap.
– Simon Sheehan
Jun 15 '11 at 0:10
Data usage monitoring is best done at the OS or network (router) level.
– Darth Android
Jun 15 '11 at 0:20
add a comment |
I currently use Firefox as my browser, and saw there was an add-on called "Firefox Throttle" that would limit my bandwidth usage for me. As I am on an overall low data cap from my ISP, I wanted to use this plugin, but found it was outdated and broken. What other way can I limit my bandwidth?
I am using Windows 7 x64
windows-7 firefox bandwidth
I currently use Firefox as my browser, and saw there was an add-on called "Firefox Throttle" that would limit my bandwidth usage for me. As I am on an overall low data cap from my ISP, I wanted to use this plugin, but found it was outdated and broken. What other way can I limit my bandwidth?
I am using Windows 7 x64
windows-7 firefox bandwidth
windows-7 firefox bandwidth
edited Jun 15 '11 at 0:10
Simon Sheehan
asked Jun 14 '11 at 23:32
Simon SheehanSimon Sheehan
7,632124268
7,632124268
Bandwidth, or data cap? Your ISP telling you that you can only use 30GB per month is a data cap, your connection being rated at 10Mbps is a bandwidth limit.
– Darth Android
Jun 15 '11 at 0:01
I have a data cap.
– Simon Sheehan
Jun 15 '11 at 0:10
Data usage monitoring is best done at the OS or network (router) level.
– Darth Android
Jun 15 '11 at 0:20
add a comment |
Bandwidth, or data cap? Your ISP telling you that you can only use 30GB per month is a data cap, your connection being rated at 10Mbps is a bandwidth limit.
– Darth Android
Jun 15 '11 at 0:01
I have a data cap.
– Simon Sheehan
Jun 15 '11 at 0:10
Data usage monitoring is best done at the OS or network (router) level.
– Darth Android
Jun 15 '11 at 0:20
Bandwidth, or data cap? Your ISP telling you that you can only use 30GB per month is a data cap, your connection being rated at 10Mbps is a bandwidth limit.
– Darth Android
Jun 15 '11 at 0:01
Bandwidth, or data cap? Your ISP telling you that you can only use 30GB per month is a data cap, your connection being rated at 10Mbps is a bandwidth limit.
– Darth Android
Jun 15 '11 at 0:01
I have a data cap.
– Simon Sheehan
Jun 15 '11 at 0:10
I have a data cap.
– Simon Sheehan
Jun 15 '11 at 0:10
Data usage monitoring is best done at the OS or network (router) level.
– Darth Android
Jun 15 '11 at 0:20
Data usage monitoring is best done at the OS or network (router) level.
– Darth Android
Jun 15 '11 at 0:20
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
6 years later, a plugin is no longer needed! This has been part of the Network Monitor UI (press F12) since Firefox 55 (August 2017). Throttling allows the emulation of the bandwidth and latency of various network types, from GPRS up to WiFi:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools/Network_Monitor/Throttling
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1349559
add a comment |
Data usage isn't really something that an application can "throttle"-- you either use the bandwidth, or you don't. Throttling usually indicates a limit on the speed; you use the same amount of data just over a larger time.
If you're running Windows, a program called NetLimiter is really useful for monitoring how much data is being consumed by the system.
You can also do it at the network level if your router supports it. the DD-WRT and other custom firmwares (pfsense, monowall, Tomato, OpenWRT) often display data usage in the router status
I disagree with 'data usage isn't really something that an application can "throttle"' - how are audio applications otherwise programmed, where you can choose to capture data at, say, 22kHz vs. 44.1 kHz? Similarly, all one would need is a timer for IP packets - and if the application already read enough data in a time period, it can simply refuse to execute read requests for the rest of the period - ergo, throttle. I would agree that specifically Firefox doesn't have that possibility, however.
– sdaau
Mar 27 '13 at 9:16
I wouldn't consider either of those scenarios "throttling" - Switching to a lower-bitrate audio codec or an application refusing to function are ways to reduce data usage; Throttling is where you have the same amount of data, but reduce the speed of transmission intentionally, usually with the implication that it could otherwise transmit faster. Reducing data usage is usually a way to combat how noticable the effects of throttling are.
– Darth Android
Mar 28 '13 at 16:37
If you throttle the bandwidth used, it will take longer to reach the data cap. A page that loads slower may only partially download before you click the next link or close it. A slower web might change your habits and have you not opening 40 tabs (and then again it might change your habits to the opposite and have you open every link in a background tab to read later when it has loaded). The user is asking how to throttle the bandwidth, and this can definitely be done in principle, see e.g. thersync
parameter--bwlimit
. The question is whether a Firefox plugin can do it anymore.
– clacke
Jan 5 at 3:54
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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active
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votes
6 years later, a plugin is no longer needed! This has been part of the Network Monitor UI (press F12) since Firefox 55 (August 2017). Throttling allows the emulation of the bandwidth and latency of various network types, from GPRS up to WiFi:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools/Network_Monitor/Throttling
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1349559
add a comment |
6 years later, a plugin is no longer needed! This has been part of the Network Monitor UI (press F12) since Firefox 55 (August 2017). Throttling allows the emulation of the bandwidth and latency of various network types, from GPRS up to WiFi:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools/Network_Monitor/Throttling
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1349559
add a comment |
6 years later, a plugin is no longer needed! This has been part of the Network Monitor UI (press F12) since Firefox 55 (August 2017). Throttling allows the emulation of the bandwidth and latency of various network types, from GPRS up to WiFi:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools/Network_Monitor/Throttling
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1349559
6 years later, a plugin is no longer needed! This has been part of the Network Monitor UI (press F12) since Firefox 55 (August 2017). Throttling allows the emulation of the bandwidth and latency of various network types, from GPRS up to WiFi:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools/Network_Monitor/Throttling
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1349559
answered Jan 5 at 4:18
clackeclacke
153111
153111
add a comment |
add a comment |
Data usage isn't really something that an application can "throttle"-- you either use the bandwidth, or you don't. Throttling usually indicates a limit on the speed; you use the same amount of data just over a larger time.
If you're running Windows, a program called NetLimiter is really useful for monitoring how much data is being consumed by the system.
You can also do it at the network level if your router supports it. the DD-WRT and other custom firmwares (pfsense, monowall, Tomato, OpenWRT) often display data usage in the router status
I disagree with 'data usage isn't really something that an application can "throttle"' - how are audio applications otherwise programmed, where you can choose to capture data at, say, 22kHz vs. 44.1 kHz? Similarly, all one would need is a timer for IP packets - and if the application already read enough data in a time period, it can simply refuse to execute read requests for the rest of the period - ergo, throttle. I would agree that specifically Firefox doesn't have that possibility, however.
– sdaau
Mar 27 '13 at 9:16
I wouldn't consider either of those scenarios "throttling" - Switching to a lower-bitrate audio codec or an application refusing to function are ways to reduce data usage; Throttling is where you have the same amount of data, but reduce the speed of transmission intentionally, usually with the implication that it could otherwise transmit faster. Reducing data usage is usually a way to combat how noticable the effects of throttling are.
– Darth Android
Mar 28 '13 at 16:37
If you throttle the bandwidth used, it will take longer to reach the data cap. A page that loads slower may only partially download before you click the next link or close it. A slower web might change your habits and have you not opening 40 tabs (and then again it might change your habits to the opposite and have you open every link in a background tab to read later when it has loaded). The user is asking how to throttle the bandwidth, and this can definitely be done in principle, see e.g. thersync
parameter--bwlimit
. The question is whether a Firefox plugin can do it anymore.
– clacke
Jan 5 at 3:54
add a comment |
Data usage isn't really something that an application can "throttle"-- you either use the bandwidth, or you don't. Throttling usually indicates a limit on the speed; you use the same amount of data just over a larger time.
If you're running Windows, a program called NetLimiter is really useful for monitoring how much data is being consumed by the system.
You can also do it at the network level if your router supports it. the DD-WRT and other custom firmwares (pfsense, monowall, Tomato, OpenWRT) often display data usage in the router status
I disagree with 'data usage isn't really something that an application can "throttle"' - how are audio applications otherwise programmed, where you can choose to capture data at, say, 22kHz vs. 44.1 kHz? Similarly, all one would need is a timer for IP packets - and if the application already read enough data in a time period, it can simply refuse to execute read requests for the rest of the period - ergo, throttle. I would agree that specifically Firefox doesn't have that possibility, however.
– sdaau
Mar 27 '13 at 9:16
I wouldn't consider either of those scenarios "throttling" - Switching to a lower-bitrate audio codec or an application refusing to function are ways to reduce data usage; Throttling is where you have the same amount of data, but reduce the speed of transmission intentionally, usually with the implication that it could otherwise transmit faster. Reducing data usage is usually a way to combat how noticable the effects of throttling are.
– Darth Android
Mar 28 '13 at 16:37
If you throttle the bandwidth used, it will take longer to reach the data cap. A page that loads slower may only partially download before you click the next link or close it. A slower web might change your habits and have you not opening 40 tabs (and then again it might change your habits to the opposite and have you open every link in a background tab to read later when it has loaded). The user is asking how to throttle the bandwidth, and this can definitely be done in principle, see e.g. thersync
parameter--bwlimit
. The question is whether a Firefox plugin can do it anymore.
– clacke
Jan 5 at 3:54
add a comment |
Data usage isn't really something that an application can "throttle"-- you either use the bandwidth, or you don't. Throttling usually indicates a limit on the speed; you use the same amount of data just over a larger time.
If you're running Windows, a program called NetLimiter is really useful for monitoring how much data is being consumed by the system.
You can also do it at the network level if your router supports it. the DD-WRT and other custom firmwares (pfsense, monowall, Tomato, OpenWRT) often display data usage in the router status
Data usage isn't really something that an application can "throttle"-- you either use the bandwidth, or you don't. Throttling usually indicates a limit on the speed; you use the same amount of data just over a larger time.
If you're running Windows, a program called NetLimiter is really useful for monitoring how much data is being consumed by the system.
You can also do it at the network level if your router supports it. the DD-WRT and other custom firmwares (pfsense, monowall, Tomato, OpenWRT) often display data usage in the router status
answered Jun 15 '11 at 0:22
Darth AndroidDarth Android
34.1k47599
34.1k47599
I disagree with 'data usage isn't really something that an application can "throttle"' - how are audio applications otherwise programmed, where you can choose to capture data at, say, 22kHz vs. 44.1 kHz? Similarly, all one would need is a timer for IP packets - and if the application already read enough data in a time period, it can simply refuse to execute read requests for the rest of the period - ergo, throttle. I would agree that specifically Firefox doesn't have that possibility, however.
– sdaau
Mar 27 '13 at 9:16
I wouldn't consider either of those scenarios "throttling" - Switching to a lower-bitrate audio codec or an application refusing to function are ways to reduce data usage; Throttling is where you have the same amount of data, but reduce the speed of transmission intentionally, usually with the implication that it could otherwise transmit faster. Reducing data usage is usually a way to combat how noticable the effects of throttling are.
– Darth Android
Mar 28 '13 at 16:37
If you throttle the bandwidth used, it will take longer to reach the data cap. A page that loads slower may only partially download before you click the next link or close it. A slower web might change your habits and have you not opening 40 tabs (and then again it might change your habits to the opposite and have you open every link in a background tab to read later when it has loaded). The user is asking how to throttle the bandwidth, and this can definitely be done in principle, see e.g. thersync
parameter--bwlimit
. The question is whether a Firefox plugin can do it anymore.
– clacke
Jan 5 at 3:54
add a comment |
I disagree with 'data usage isn't really something that an application can "throttle"' - how are audio applications otherwise programmed, where you can choose to capture data at, say, 22kHz vs. 44.1 kHz? Similarly, all one would need is a timer for IP packets - and if the application already read enough data in a time period, it can simply refuse to execute read requests for the rest of the period - ergo, throttle. I would agree that specifically Firefox doesn't have that possibility, however.
– sdaau
Mar 27 '13 at 9:16
I wouldn't consider either of those scenarios "throttling" - Switching to a lower-bitrate audio codec or an application refusing to function are ways to reduce data usage; Throttling is where you have the same amount of data, but reduce the speed of transmission intentionally, usually with the implication that it could otherwise transmit faster. Reducing data usage is usually a way to combat how noticable the effects of throttling are.
– Darth Android
Mar 28 '13 at 16:37
If you throttle the bandwidth used, it will take longer to reach the data cap. A page that loads slower may only partially download before you click the next link or close it. A slower web might change your habits and have you not opening 40 tabs (and then again it might change your habits to the opposite and have you open every link in a background tab to read later when it has loaded). The user is asking how to throttle the bandwidth, and this can definitely be done in principle, see e.g. thersync
parameter--bwlimit
. The question is whether a Firefox plugin can do it anymore.
– clacke
Jan 5 at 3:54
I disagree with 'data usage isn't really something that an application can "throttle"' - how are audio applications otherwise programmed, where you can choose to capture data at, say, 22kHz vs. 44.1 kHz? Similarly, all one would need is a timer for IP packets - and if the application already read enough data in a time period, it can simply refuse to execute read requests for the rest of the period - ergo, throttle. I would agree that specifically Firefox doesn't have that possibility, however.
– sdaau
Mar 27 '13 at 9:16
I disagree with 'data usage isn't really something that an application can "throttle"' - how are audio applications otherwise programmed, where you can choose to capture data at, say, 22kHz vs. 44.1 kHz? Similarly, all one would need is a timer for IP packets - and if the application already read enough data in a time period, it can simply refuse to execute read requests for the rest of the period - ergo, throttle. I would agree that specifically Firefox doesn't have that possibility, however.
– sdaau
Mar 27 '13 at 9:16
I wouldn't consider either of those scenarios "throttling" - Switching to a lower-bitrate audio codec or an application refusing to function are ways to reduce data usage; Throttling is where you have the same amount of data, but reduce the speed of transmission intentionally, usually with the implication that it could otherwise transmit faster. Reducing data usage is usually a way to combat how noticable the effects of throttling are.
– Darth Android
Mar 28 '13 at 16:37
I wouldn't consider either of those scenarios "throttling" - Switching to a lower-bitrate audio codec or an application refusing to function are ways to reduce data usage; Throttling is where you have the same amount of data, but reduce the speed of transmission intentionally, usually with the implication that it could otherwise transmit faster. Reducing data usage is usually a way to combat how noticable the effects of throttling are.
– Darth Android
Mar 28 '13 at 16:37
If you throttle the bandwidth used, it will take longer to reach the data cap. A page that loads slower may only partially download before you click the next link or close it. A slower web might change your habits and have you not opening 40 tabs (and then again it might change your habits to the opposite and have you open every link in a background tab to read later when it has loaded). The user is asking how to throttle the bandwidth, and this can definitely be done in principle, see e.g. the
rsync
parameter --bwlimit
. The question is whether a Firefox plugin can do it anymore.– clacke
Jan 5 at 3:54
If you throttle the bandwidth used, it will take longer to reach the data cap. A page that loads slower may only partially download before you click the next link or close it. A slower web might change your habits and have you not opening 40 tabs (and then again it might change your habits to the opposite and have you open every link in a background tab to read later when it has loaded). The user is asking how to throttle the bandwidth, and this can definitely be done in principle, see e.g. the
rsync
parameter --bwlimit
. The question is whether a Firefox plugin can do it anymore.– clacke
Jan 5 at 3:54
add a comment |
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Bandwidth, or data cap? Your ISP telling you that you can only use 30GB per month is a data cap, your connection being rated at 10Mbps is a bandwidth limit.
– Darth Android
Jun 15 '11 at 0:01
I have a data cap.
– Simon Sheehan
Jun 15 '11 at 0:10
Data usage monitoring is best done at the OS or network (router) level.
– Darth Android
Jun 15 '11 at 0:20