

Note that it is only measuring data sent while Speedify is connected. These options are perfect if you have a set data plan from your carrier. Monthly Data Cap: When enabled, you can set a data limit for connections and specify when you want to reset the data limit each month.Daily Data Cap: This controls how much data you can use on this connection each day, before Speedify warns you and stops using the connection-or slows it down, depending on your selection."Congested" means that the Wi-Fi is carrying enough data that it is starting to slow down your internet traffic: Priority State Never - Speedify will not use this network.īy default, Speedify will set Wi-Fi connections to "Primary" and Cellular connections to "Secondary." The interactions of all of these modes are shown in the following table.This setting is good for very expensive connections, which should only be used in emergencies. Backup - Speedify will not use this network unless all the Primary and Secondary networks are not available.This setting is good for connections that have reasonable data caps, as they will be used much less often than the ALWAYS connections. Secondary - Speedify will use this connection for occasional speed boosts when the Primary connections are being heavily used or slowing down.Recommended for internet connections that do not have data caps on them. Primary - Speedify will always try to use this network when it is available.Automatic - Let Speedify manage the connection's priority.Priority: The priority of a connection determines how and when Speedify should use it. Disconnected - The connection cannot access the internet, so Speedify is not using it.Online, Sleeping - Speedify is not using the connection, because the other connection(s) are good enough that it's not needed right now.Online, Not Connected - The connection has a route to the internet, and Speedify is attempting to connect.Online, Connected - The connection is working, and Speedify is using it.A reliable internet connection typically has little to no packet loss with values above 1% resulting in significantly decreased performance. Packet Loss: The percentage of data packets recently lost or dropped by this connection.A lower value indicates a more stable and consistent connection. Jitter: The variability in latency of this connection.Lower is better, with values below 80 ms desired for gaming and values above 150 ms resulting in noticeable delays and sluggishness in your internet experience.

Latency: Also known as ping, latency is the total round-trip time (RTT) from when this connection sends a request to when it receives a response from the server.If you wish to view more information about your connection, you can click on EXPAND and should show you several things.
