Last week, the telecom technician came to my house again and said that he suspected that I had a PCDN at home. The basis for his suspicion was that there was a large amount of upstream and downstream traffic for 215 consecutive hours (in fact, I downloaded very little during this period, less than 1T in 215 hours, and less than 300G in uploads). I was speechless. My transmission upstream is limited to 1024KB/second. What else can I do?
I just took a look at the recent cases online of users whose speeds were throttled or whose Internet was disconnected by operators in the name of PCDN. It seems that all major operators are using the panacea name of PCDN to crack down on users with large upload volumes (this "large" is relative to ordinary home users. You know, the average home user's upload volume may not exceed 1G in a day~), so I also feel the danger: after all, I am an old user who uses a public IP package at a very low price, and I am a thorn in the eyes of the telecom. If they get the chance to accuse me of violating the rules and take back my public IP, I will suffer a great loss (although I don't use the public IP now, but if you can get a good deal, you are a fool not to take advantage of it).
After much thought, and considering that I had experienced a three-day internet outage last year, I already had a sense of crisis, so I simply subscribed to a gigabit broadband service from China Mobile, which boasts 1,000 megabits of downstream and 100 megabits of upstream.
——————————————————————————————————-
Believe it or not, there is actually nearly 130Mbps uplink:

——————————————————————————————————
After more than a week of work, I finally managed to split my intranet connections. All my home data center-related connections are now connected to China Telecom, while all other applications (including PT downloads) are connected to China Mobile. China Mobile's connection is now the default connection, and China Telecom and China Mobile serve as backup lines for each other. Now, aside from power outages, I no longer worry about accessing certain applications due to broadband issues. Although I was forced to add China Mobile broadband, I suddenly feel more secure with dual broadband. It also fulfills my long-held dream of dual broadband.
It’s not easy. The search results for the term “home data center” on Google search engine finally overwhelmed Baidu Encyclopedia and Wikipedia, which used to dominate me. Although this time is definitely very short, it is worth posting a comment:
