Slow Internet and Freezing Netflix
#1
Posted 19 November 2012 - 09:43 AM
I am have 2 concerns with my new Wii U and hope someone can help shed some light on these:
1. The internet browser runs increasibly slow! It took it about 2-3 minutes to load the ign.com website. Is there anything I can do to speed this up (ie. firewall and router settings). I am quite good with computers but know little about networks and firewalls, so dumbing down of any technical things would be great
2. When I load netflix the system locks up on Netflix loading screen. I cannot even turn the power off on the console and am forced to turn off my power bar to reset the system. Any one experience this and know of a fix?
Thanks for the help!
#2
Posted 19 November 2012 - 09:46 AM
#3
Posted 19 November 2012 - 10:01 AM
#4
Posted 19 November 2012 - 10:03 AM
#5
Posted 19 November 2012 - 10:14 AM
My internet browser is pretty quick, so it's probably either busy servers or a slow internet connection. As for Netflix, I remember there were problems with the Wii and 3DS Netflix apps ( also freezing), so it's normal ( I think).
I know what it wouldn't be an slow internet connection. I jumped on my Xbox and was playing Call of Duty online and it was working great. Anyone know if there are router settings that need to be optimized to help it run faster?
#6
Posted 19 November 2012 - 10:16 AM
I know what it wouldn't be an slow internet connection. I jumped on my Xbox and was playing Call of Duty online and it was working great. Anyone know if there are router settings that need to be optimized to help it run faster?
If you're internet is fine, then it's likely traffic on Nintendo's servers. Though my PS3 and Vita have excessive download times ( 200 minutes for a 490MB game on Vita), despite having a great connection. Maybe it's just the console? But I'd say test the internet browser again in a few days and see if it's still slow.
#7
Posted 20 November 2012 - 08:02 AM
Ok so far heres what works, entering in everything manually.
1. Go into connection types, Hit "Manual Configuration"
2. Input your SSID
3. Input the correct security type, this is key.
4. Put your password in properly
5. For ip address "Do not auto obtain".
6. open up cmd in your computer, type in ipconfig
7. Now input that ip address but add 10 to the last number so "192.168.0.1" will be entered as "192.168.0.11"
8. Enter the rest of your info inside such as subnet mask and default gateway exactly as you see it in your ipconfig.
9. Now hit next, hit configure now for your DNS. When asked about DNS hit "Dont auto obtain".
10. For the first server put in 8.8.8.8
11. For the second server put in 8.8.4.4
12. Hit Next, when asked about a proxy hit no proxy
13. Leave mtu as the default
14. it should work, if not check the ip and that it is the internet ip + 10. Good luck
- bigpapa7272 and Jman781 like this
#8
Posted 20 November 2012 - 04:22 PM
Found a fix to my problem on another site, in case anyone else is experiencing the same as me. This also works if you cannot connect to WiFi at all. Netflix and other apps no longer froze the system after doing this:
Thank you! I've been loooking for a fix for 3 days now. It truly works.. thanks!
#9
Posted 23 November 2012 - 10:12 PM
#10
Posted 24 November 2012 - 08:52 AM
#11
Posted 24 November 2012 - 01:23 PM
That is one crazy solution. Any genius out there want to tell us why this works? My internet/ netflix worked from the start, but I'm curious how this fix works.
He changed the channel (from 192.168.0.10 to 192.168.0.11) to one with less traffic, so he got a larger share of bandwidth.
#12
Posted 24 November 2012 - 01:27 PM
The issues you're suffering from haven't occur for me yet, the internet browser is lightning quick and Netflix loads relatively fast.
EDIT: It seems you found a solution to your dilemma, that's what I get for skimming through the topic, lol.
Edited by Zinix, 24 November 2012 - 01:28 PM.
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#13
Posted 24 November 2012 - 03:19 PM
Found a fix to my problem on another site, in case anyone else is experiencing the same as me. This also works if you cannot connect to WiFi at all. Netflix and other apps no longer froze the system after doing this:
Ok so far heres what works, entering in everything manually.
1. Go into connection types, Hit "Manual Configuration"
2. Input your SSID
3. Input the correct security type, this is key.
4. Put your password in properly
5. For ip address "Do not auto obtain".
6. open up cmd in your computer, type in ipconfig
7. Now input that ip address but add 10 to the last number so "192.168.0.1" will be entered as "192.168.0.11"
8. Enter the rest of your info inside such as subnet mask and default gateway exactly as you see it in your ipconfig.
9. Now hit next, hit configure now for your DNS. When asked about DNS hit "Dont auto obtain".
10. For the first server put in 8.8.8.8
11. For the second server put in 8.8.4.4
12. Hit Next, when asked about a proxy hit no proxy
13. Leave mtu as the default
14. it should work, if not check the ip and that it is the internet ip + 10. Good luck
thanks it connected to the net much faster!
#14
Posted 08 August 2013 - 04:53 PM
You're not too far off, and because you're so close, I'll explain what he's done. Lucky you!He changed the channel (from 192.168.0.10 to 192.168.0.11) to one with less traffic, so he got a larger share of bandwidth.
First, channel isn't the term to use, though it is used when discussing wifi, only it's referring to the channel used by the wifi antenna. More later...
What he did was tell his wiiU to used a 'static IP address,' which is what the 192.168..... etc. numbers are. The IP address would normally come from the router on its own, but that seems to be failing. Setting a 'static' IP address sure the wiiU is using 1 address only, the one you manually input.
DNS means 'domain name server' and its an IP address to a server somewhere that takes the 'domain name' or a .com type web address, and finds the the IP address of whatever server has the content you're looking for. Setting them to 8.8.8.8 etc is essentially setting your DNS servers to a Static IP address (or 2).
Things you'll need to know about this configuration:
** the prefix (the first three numbers separated by periods, in his case: 192.168.0) can change to something else if you replace your router, in which case you'll need to go through the steps again using a pc (or just another network device) to find the new prefix.
** if you go through the steps and find things are still slow, check your settings and try a new IP address. Use the same three number prefix, but a different fourth. It doesn't have to be 10 more, it could be 100 more, so long as its 254 or less and no other device on your network is using it.
** if all this and you STILL have issues, you actually COULD change the channel of your wifi router. Wifi broadcasts in the same realm of the electromagnetic spectrum as the wavelength of portable phones, wireless controlllers and, I suspect, the wiiU gamepad. You'll need to go into your router's settings, usually using a pc web browser, and change the channel it broadcasts on. It will be something like 1 to 11 or so. How you do it depends on your router's manufacturer, so you'll need to look up how based on that.
If this all made you heads spin, my bad!
Edited by Mighty_Dino, 08 August 2013 - 05:01 PM.
#15
Posted 09 August 2013 - 04:38 AM
I just reset/turn off my router if things run slow, this usually results in things getting sorted.
#16
Posted 11 August 2013 - 03:35 AM
#17
Posted 12 August 2013 - 10:20 PM
My WiiU was stealing my laptop's IP address, though I'm not sure why. Could be the router, but I've had it much longer than the WiiU and never had that issue.
Now it and the laptop are set to static and I'm no longer having the hang ups and random connection drops (which were happening to everything on my network).
Best guess I have: the WiiU has a problem sometimes with obtaining an ip from a router and can inadvertantly configure itself to an ip already in use, causing packets to drop and general networking brouhaha.
#18
Posted 13 August 2013 - 07:24 AM
He alo changed the DNS. Instead of using his ISP's (when nothing's there, that's what it does), he changed it for Google's DNS. (8.8.8.8, 8.8.4.4)He changed the channel (from 192.168.0.10 to 192.168.0.11) to one with less traffic, so he got a larger share of bandwidth.
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#19
Posted 16 August 2013 - 08:20 AM
He alo changed the DNS. Instead of using his ISP's (when nothing's there, that's what it does), he changed it for Google's DNS. (8.8.8.8, 8.8.4.4)
I forget that google has their own, thanks for clearing up the mystery dns!
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