Hector wrote:May I just humbly and ignorantly ask, why can't the internet bandwidth (or whatever it's technically called) from Turkey (supplied by cable from TTNET?) be increased so that the issue of slow internet speeds in the TRNC then doesn't arise?
Other than those times when the links between North Cyprus and Turkey are not performing as they should, this is not where problems typically occur. When this link is working properly, which is the vast majority of the time and when it is not is typically fixed within minutes or hours rahter than days and weeks, then there is more than ample capacity on the links between Turkey and North Cyprus, generally and specifically for MM as well. However unless your destination is in Turkey itself, then it still has to get out from Turkey as well and typically it is
these links that tend to get congested at peak times and not the ones between Turkey and North Cyprus. There is ample capacity on the links between Turkey and North Cyprus, despite what some would have you believe and MM (and I suspect other ISP) can afford and does pay TTNET for more capacity on this link than it's total peak time usage needs. Between you and any given destination there will be a series of links and any one of these can be the cause of problems. From your house to the ISP's base station would be the first link. Then from the bases station to Cyprus side of the link out from North Cyprus to Turkey (typically this will itself be more than one link or 'hop' in internet jargon). Then to the other side of this link to the south coast of Turkey. Then, again probably via several more links to the Turkey side of a link out from Turkey into Europe. Then various links or hops through Europe to the UK (if the destination is in the UK) and then hops within the UK until eventual arrival at your destination. It is a chain of consecutive links and hops and any problems (congestion, dropped packets and others things) on ANY of these links in the entire chain from any given start and end point will affect the performance of the connection. Streaming TV along with 'twitch' gaming are massively sensitive to even relatively small issues on ANY of these links / hops, in a way that most other usages of the internet are not. What is more your ISP will only have control of the 'starting' fraction of these links. Turk Telekom will then have control of the next series in the chain - after that there can be any number of other entities that control the next series of links before the destination is reached.
This is why streaming internet TV will never be as reliable as a broadcast based service like say Digiturk where there is one entity between you and the source of the content and you pay that entity (digiturk) for the service. With internet based TV there are multiple entities that control the links necessary to deliver the picture to you, with you ISP being the 'first' (or last depending on which way round you look) , Turk Telkom being the second, one of Turk Telekom's providers of it's links out from Turkey to the rest of the world (companies like Telia - former Swedish state own telco and NTT - former Japanese state own telco and Level 3 and others) would be the third. If you are luck whatever the source's internet provider is will be the fourth (but it could pass through several others as well before reaching that) before it finally reaches the source where the pictures are coming from.
This is why the claim that a given service 'only requires 2Mbs from your ISP' and it's corollary 'if my streaming internet TV is not working that means my ISP is failing to deliver at least 2Mbs to me' are extremely misleading claims that can and do only create expectations that sooner or later can not and will not be met. The TRUTH is that streaming internet based TV is a
compromise between flexibility (being able to get exactly the content you want even though that may not legitimately be available where you are) and cost (internet based streaming TV is free or cheap comparative to sat based services) and reliability. You can not have both the maximum flexibility and low cost of internet based streaming TV AND the reliability of a sat based service. Anyone that tells you or tries to imply you can is not being honest with you.
If you use internet based streaming TV then there WILL be, sooner or later, times when it does not work. Anyone that tells you or tries to imply or create an impression otherwise is not being honest with you. Just as anyone who tells you if it is not working this means or probably means that your ISP is not delivering what you are paying for is not being honest with you. When your streaming TV service is not working ONE possible cause is your ISP and if your ISP is decent and you work with them constructively to establish if they are the cause of your problems, by doing things like connecting directly and not via wifi and doing speedtests to servers that test the relevant section of the 'chain of links' they control and only that section, rather than just demand that you 'get what you are paying for' and refuse to work with them or believe what they tell you, then your ISP will identify and rectify the problem as quickly as they can. This is what MM does, day in and day out. There will
also be times when your streaming internet based TV is not working and it is NOT because your ISP is falling to deliver 'what you have paid for'. If there are problems with the link out of from North Cyprus to Turkey, then all your ISP can do is complain to Turk Telekom and wait for them to fix it. If the problems is with the links within Turkey that move the traffic from the South coast of Turkey to the point where Turk Telekom have links out from Turkey, then all your ISP can do is complain to Turk Telekom and wait for them to fix it. If the problem is with the links that carry Turk Telekom's traffic out of Turkey to the rest of the world. then all your ISP can do is complain to Turk Telekom and wait for them to complain to their suppliers and for them to fix it. And on and on through all the chain of links and entities that control said links to whoever is actually sending out the TV streams, who may themselves be having problems that are the root cause of your TV not working properly.
Now clearly it is within the realms of possibility that your ISP is the cause of your problems at any given point in time and it knows that it is the cause of your problems but it just lies to you and says it is not. All I can say is that Multimax do NOT do this, EVER. There are times when we are mistaken and think it is not us when in fact it is us but we NEVER knowingly say it is not us when it is. As to if this is true of all other ISP's or agents for other ISP's , I could not say with any certainty. Maybe such does happen and maybe it does not. What I can say is that Multimax does not ever do this. We always do our utmost to accurately determine if it is us or not and if it is us to admit it and fix the issue as quickly as possible and if it is not us to try and 'show' to the customer that it is not us as clealry as we can. We do this equally for those (small minority) of customers that will not work with us to help determine if it is us or not and who simply shout 'you are not delivering what I am paying for - fix it' as we do for those that do work with us. The more customers are willing to work with us to establish this, then typically the quicker we are able to do so and if it is us , fix the problem.