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Hawking Technologies HBB1

Minimise gaming lag and VoIP interference with this broadband booster

What is this?
Price: £49
Manufacturer: Hawking Technologies
Technical specifications



Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
Features: Features
Value for money: Value for money
Rate this product
Verdict

Pros: Works well; easy to install and use; five star performance
Cons: Expensive; not designed for use with ADSL routers
Overall: Does a good job of prioritising traffic, but requires extra hardware when used with ADSL modems


Will Stapley, Personal Computer World 04 Jan 2006

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The majority of UK broadband users are still stuck at a relatively slow upstream of 256Kbits/sec. Although this doesn’t matter when downloading music and video, outbound services such as VoIP and online gaming have to fight over what little bandwidth there is.

With few budget routers offering QoS (quality of service) to ensure urgent packets get priority over others, performance can suffer. You’ll notice this in the form of lag during online gaming and poor-quality VoIP calls.

The HBB1 is a compact device that sits between your Ethernet modem and router. It inspects each outbound packet that passes through, prioritising those such as VoIP and online gaming, while pushing the likes of ftp uploads and email to the back of the queue.

There’s very little user involvement in the process. You plug it in and a series of LEDs tells you it’s working. A basic web-based interface can be accessed, but there are few settings to play with.

We tested the HBB1 with positive results. While uploading an FTP file, we monitored VoIP quality using Testyourvoip's service.

Through our standard connection we achieved a poor score of 2. When the HBB1 was hooked up, we got a far more impressive score of 4.4. Lag caused by outbound services during online gaming was similarly reduced.

If you use an integrated ADSL Broadband router you will need to buy extra kit, such as a switch to sit between the HBB1 and your ADSL router. For a PC to benefit from the HBB1 it must be physically wired to the switch and not bypass it by connecting wirelessly to the router.

QoS such as this is not new, and some routers offer it as standard. Its HBB1 is also rather expensive, but if your broadband setup allows it, the HBB1 will do a great job of optmising your connection.

See also:

Reliable broadband with no down time  09 Dec 2005
Broadband with a free wireless router and Internet telephony service  09 Dec 2005
Broadband with no 12-month minimum sign up  09 Dec 2005
Fast Internet, but only if you live in the right areas  09 Dec 2005
Low-cost broadband with no upper usage cap  09 Dec 2005
Low speed, cheap broadband service  09 Dec 2005
Cable broadband with no upper usage limit  09 Dec 2005
No usage limits broadband  09 Dec 2005
A cheap broadband package, but with a small usage cap  09 Dec 2005
A pay as you go broadband service  09 Dec 2005
Internet TV and broadband in one package  09 Dec 2005
Internet package with a decent monthly cap  09 Dec 2005
8Mbit broadband on test  09 Dec 2005
Constant conection and no major problems in our year-long test  09 Dec 2005

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