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Get 0 Ping On Wifi...


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If you're an avid gamer, there's a good chance that you've experienced high ping and cursed how laggy everything felt. It would be better if ping didn't factor in at all; but what is ping, and can you achieve a 0ms ping


Ping isn't just a measure of "performance." Specifically, it's a measure of the latency between your computer and a remote device. A ping tells you the time it takes for a single package of data (known as a "packet") to leave your computer, reach a remote server, and then return to you.


Ping is very perceptible in online games. For example, if you're playing a game with a 20ms ping, you should have very low latency. Actions you take appear to take place in the game near instantly. If you have a higher ping like 200ms, actions you take will be noticeably delayed and you won't be able to keep up with other people playing the game.


A lower ping is always better; it means lower latency, which is faster communication between you and the remote server. This applies to everything you do online---whether you're playing an online game or just browsing the web.


Sometimes, games and software will call ping "latency," but it's the same thing. Games often identify ping with color to help you understand how good your ping is at a glance. Typically, a green ping is ideal, yellow is borderline, and red is bad.


When you send a ping, your computer sends an ICMP echo request packet. ICMP stands for "Internet Control Message Protocol", and it's used between network devices so they can communicate with each other. The packet requests an "echo;" in other words, a reply.


However, not every computer or server can reply to ICMP echo request packets. If the computer's owner told it not to respond to ping, you won't get a reply. Instead, you'll see the "Request timed out" message as the server fails to respond to your pings in the allotted time. Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks sometimes abuse this ICMP protocol.


This would indicate some ping packets either weren't being received by the remote computer or that their replies weren't reaching you. Somewhere along the way, the packets go missing. This occurrence is known as "packet loss," and it can be a major headache in networking.


If you see "Request timed out" when you ping a website or server, you'd know that packet loss was occurring somewhere in the route between you and the server. This could be on the remote computer's network, a router somewhere in between, your ISP, or your home network.


If you're experiencing trouble while browsing the internet or playing an online game, the ping command can help identify packet loss. You can also use a traceroute to see the path your data packets take and identify when packet loss occurs.


However, there is one way to get a zero ping, even if the end result isn't that useful. If you try pinging your local computer---with the "ping localhost" command---you're asking your computer to contact itself and reply to itself. In this case, you'll often see a ping of "


This simply means that your computer can communicate with itself instantly. Of course, it really isn't instant because the software takes a small amount of time to perform these operations. However, it's so low that we can round it down to 0ms and say we have a zero ping to our own computer.


Once you start adding in lengths of cable, routers, and distances, you won't get a 0ms ping. For example, you could try pinging your own home router. In the screenshot below, we pinged our home router over a Wi-Fi connection. It's in the same room as the computer, and yet, it can't reach 1ms ping, let alone zero.


Unfortunately, as we can see from this, it takes some time just to communicate with a device sitting in the same room as you. As such, it's hard to get a 0ms ping with your own router, let alone to a website or server somewhere else in the world.


So, what does this mean for the concept of a zero ping Well, unless scientists somehow bend the laws of physics and achieve instant




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