Microgaming: Dial up versus Broadband.

steveo

Dormant account
Joined
Aug 15, 2004
Location
Australia
Hi everyone.
I'm moving to a country with limited internet connectivity and will need to use dial up instead of broadband. I'm just wondering if anyone knows how dial up compares to Broadband for microgaming software.

My computer has already installed all the software so what i'm asking is how many spins an hour I would get with the slots. Currently i get around 800-1000 spins an hour. If anyone has moved up from dial up to broadband or back down I would love to know how it has effected your amount of spins.

Cheers guys.
Steve
 
steveo said:
Hi everyone.
I'm moving to a country with limited internet connectivity and will need to use dial up instead of broadband. I'm just wondering if anyone knows how dial up compares to Broadband for microgaming software.

My computer has already installed all the software so what i'm asking is how many spins an hour I would get with the slots. Currently i get around 800-1000 spins an hour. If anyone has moved up from dial up to broadband or back down I would love to know how it has effected your amount of spins.

Cheers guys.
Steve


Well, Stevo, let me put it this way...........on dial-up you can hit spin and then have time to use the restroom, grab a beverage, go outside and check the weather..........by then the wheel should start spinning. Of course, that is dial-up in a very remote part of the US, where you are going may be faster (or slower).:eek:
 
steveo said:
Hi everyone.
My computer has already installed all the software so what i'm asking is how many spins an hour I would get with the slots. Currently i get around 800-1000 spins an hour. If anyone has moved up from dial up to broadband or back down I would love to know how it has effected your amount of spins.
Cheers guys.
Steve
Bit of a worry.
What are you going to do if the answer is only 100-200 spins per hour - not move??? :eek2:
From what I can remember of those dark ages before broadband is that an MG casino will take about 4-6hrs to download, but once installed I seem to remember it being OK to play. Good luck!
 
steveo said:
Hi everyone.
I'm moving to a country with limited internet connectivity and will need to use dial up instead of broadband. I'm just wondering if anyone knows how dial up compares to Broadband for microgaming software.

My computer has already installed all the software so what i'm asking is how many spins an hour I would get with the slots. Currently i get around 800-1000 spins an hour. If anyone has moved up from dial up to broadband or back down I would love to know how it has effected your amount of spins.

Cheers guys.
Steve

As you have the software installed, the actual bandwidth load playing the games on the download version presuming the games you are playing are already installed :) - is not very high at all. As long as you are not surfing the web, downloading other software/mail/etc you should find the casino is pretty responsive - as the majority of the work takes place on the Gaming Server and not the client - The Gaming Server just tells the client the result of the spin/hand etc.
 
when i'm at home and playing on broadband, i manage about 1000-1200 spins an hour, but if i'm away and i'm using my laptop i will use my dial-up connection and can manage about 500-600 spins an hour
 
Spin Rate

I experimented with this a great deal when playing the Casino Action tournaments. I have Broadband, but I found that local PC settings made a considerable difference. For 5 Reel Drive, I could easily get 2000 spins per hour, however I could reach 3000 per hour with a few local tweaks.
The bonus slots run slower, however, it is possible to remove the inbuilt spin delay, which is no longer available from Autoplay, and ramp them up to around 2000 per minute.
Laptops are slower as they appear to have lower processor speeds, and limited cooling ability (my Nephew has one). Dial up may be a problem if you have the MG problem of a bad installation. This can cause the casino to continually download in the background, regardless of whether the full suite of games is installed. On dial-up this will "kill" the casino, and spin rates will be extremely low. Under normal conditions though, an MG will handle each spin with 3 data packets.
Best tip would be to use the msconfig function and disable all tasks except the basics when playing the casino. With XP it should be possible to go one better by tuning an identity specifically for casino play.
I will be attempting to play MG over Dial-up after buying my Mother a PC which I will use when staying with her. I am not sure whether XP gives the same trouble as my 98SE with the casino software.
 
Lower processor speed should generally not affect the speed of play unless we're talking a REAL slow processor (ie pre-Pentium). More likely to affect the speed of play (other than the connection) would be the lack of enough physical RAM (I recommend a minimum 256MB for any system from Win2K and beyond.)

Regarding broadband vs. dialup, I think Scrollock's numbers look pretty reasonable. And as Webzcas has pointed out, the GUI is basically hosted on your computer - only small packets of data pass between your computer and the server while playing, so unless your dialup connection is really poor, you should still be able to get a reasonable play speed.
 
vinylweatherman said:
The bonus slots run slower, however, it is possible to remove the inbuilt spin delay, which is no longer available from Autoplay, and ramp them up to around 2000 per minute.
Don't blink thou!!! :eek:
 
Sorry to say, when my cable went out, I did the "flash" version" and I had to log in a ton of times cause I kept getting timed out...was so frustrating...I finally quit after 2 hours of trying to play ...think I got about 15 spins in total!

Got my cable back next day...thank goodnes! lol!:lolup:
 

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