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Performance Pinging V2.0.1   
Suggested by milentechie - Updated by webfork on 3 May 2010
328KB (uncompressed) - Popularity score (103)
Website - Screenshot - Download - Comments (1) - Post comment - Permalink

 
Synopsis: Performance Pinging is a network and performance and diagnostic tool. It allows you to ping a host continuously or with a single ping using different data volumes, which can give you an indication of the performance of the route to your host. You can change the ping interval from 2 to 30 seconds using various timeouts. The timeout is always smaller than the pinging interval. Results are written to log window and log file if so chosen. Unreachable hosts have a value of 0 ms. The analysis function sends various pings, 10 each of 10 bytes, 100 bytes, 500 bytes, 1 kbytes, 10 kbytes, 50 kbytes and 64 kbytes. The round trip times are shown with the total and average times.
Writes settings to: Application folder
How to extract: Download the ZIP package and extract to a folder of your choice. Launch perfping.exe.
License: Freeware
System Requirements: Win95 / Win98 / WinME / WinNT / Win2K / WinXP
What's new: >>
- fixed logging function for perfcopy (thanks to Ville)
- added file search for English version file
- minor Gui fixes

Posted comments:

[Anonymous] mozkillVery useful tool. I'd rather us WinMtr than this but this program does something WinMtr doesn't do, which is log to a file. [2009-12-17 18:07]


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All HTML tags will be removed from your comment. URLs (http, https, ftp) will be automatically detected and hyperlinked. I reserve the right to delete irrelevant, frivolous or offensive comments. For more general topics (eg. whether apps that write to the registry, leave traces on the host machine, rely on certain versions of IE etc. can be considered portable), please post to the Portable Freeware Discussion forum. If your virus scanner has detected a virus in the application, please email the author directly or post to the forum. Note that false positives (i.e. flagging a virus when there is actually none) are extremely common for virus scanners. When in doubt, try an online scanner like Online Malware Scanner or VirusTotal, which scans files using multiple anti-virus engines. It is very likely to be a false positive if only a few engines raise the red flag.

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