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Peakhour 4 pc11/20/2023 ![]() Selecting Full Size makes the openings rectangular, the same size as the buttons on the screen, unless they have been compromised by your specifying the Toolbar Size to be Small or Medium. Selecting 1/3" Circles will make the bottom toolbar openings so small it may require the use of a stylus, and will make them inaccessible to most users. Select 1/4" Circles to make the openings so small it will probably require a pointed stylus to access them. ![]() Upper Toolbar Openings - Proloquo2Go puts two buttons on the upper toolbar for navigating back from within folders. The center button takes you back to the home page. The button on the left takes you back one folder. These buttons are normally open on the keyguard, but for users who do not navigate folders, you may choose to close them. Warning: If you don't leave at least one of these buttons open, you may not be able to navigate back to the home screen.īutton Spacing - This setting is found in Appearance: View: Advanced Options. It controls the amount of white space between the cells. Never choose Very Compact, because it will leave no space and the keyguard will obscure some of the text and/or graphics near the edges of the cells. When PeakHour is running constantly this is no problem but it can lead to inaccuracies if it's not running for long periods / during large transfers.For the same reason, don't choose Compact on the iPad or the Mini, only on the Pro 12.9. This means they reset to zero after every 4GB of data transferred when this happens, PeakHour can no longer figure out how much data has been transferred since it was last read. This is because the traffic counters in SNMP are only 32bits which mean they only hold a maximum of 4GB. If it's alot of data (more than a few gigabytes) then it may not be accurate. If its only a small amount of data (few hundred MBs) then PeakHour will still be accurate when its started again. It actually depends on how much data you put through the router whilst PeakHour is not running. There is a certain amount of leeway here as PeakHour will pick up where it left off after restarting. You're right in that the Mac Mini needs to be running for it to measure total usage. If PeakHour is monitoring your Internet router, it will be measuring usage of all devices that use that router to access the Internet. Just a couple of suggestions, hopefully that helps. One more thing: you can use the old Airport Configuration Utility (5.6.x) to observe the signal strength of each wireless client - this can also be helpful in diagnosing WiFi issues. You could also use it to 'tune' the placement of your AE for best performance to try to minimise those dropouts. This would help you diagnose issues during those slow/dropout/loss of connection periods (by observing the drop in performance). If the Internet is slow, it could be caused by one of those devices taking up all the bandwidth - Activity Monitor can't tell you this.īy monitoring the Airport Express as well, you can see how much bandwidth is going over your wireless LAN. ![]() This would let you see the Internet usage of all of your devices (ATV1, iPad, Mac) rather than only the Mac. PeakHour monitors routers and access points to show total overall usage.įor example, you could set up PeakHour to monitor both your Airport Express and your Internet router (assuming your Internet router supports SNMP or UPnP - if its the Airport Express, it should be no problem). Activity Monitor only shows you the network usage of the Mac that you're on. PeakHour gives you a slightly different perspective to Activity Monitor. See the link at the bottom of for more info. To help with this and ensure people don't buy the app and then end up disappointed because it doesn't work, there is a free Compatibility Check tool available as well. I believe this will greatly increase the number of people who can use this app and may be the first app of it's kind on any platform that can monitor bandwidth usage using UPnP.Īs this is so new and comparatively untested aside from my own collection of devices and those of a dozen or so beta testers it would be great if you could post your feedback and experiences here. The previous version only supported SNMP as a means of monitoring but this new version introduces support for UPnP devices as well. The part I need some help with is compatibility. It's a menubar app that displays your network device's upload and download speeds in real-time.ĭetails can be found at the web site here: I'm hoping you can help with testing the version 2.0 of PeakHour, the network bandwidth tool for OS X.
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