In a smaller number of cases they may not work; see our article on these cases. In most modern and semi modern houses you should be fine. Where the house wiring is in good condition, they can deliver a connection almost as good as if you were plugged into the router directly, which is exactly what gamers need for low latency and downloading large files. Ethernet connections will always be faster than Wi-Fi for downloads.
Sometimes this may not work the first time and you need to pause and resume the download a couple of times to get a better speed. Go to Notifications …. Downloads to do this. See the quick video demo below. Also, if you have multiple downloads going at once, then pause some of the non essential ones so the ones you really want will download faster. It is very important to configure the right settings on your PS4 though so it can still download when in rest mode.
Your PS4 will now still continue to download files even when in rest mode, and in some cases this may make the download complete a little faster. The light on your console will flash orange when it is in rest mode. Pressing the power button or the PlayStation button on your pad will turn the console back on so you can check download progress.
Another way to potentially improve download speeds on your PS4 is to change your DNS server settings. This can sometimes improve the bandwidth available to your console, but is very hit and miss and will sometimes make no difference or even worsen the speeds you get. The performance of DNS servers depends on so many different factors it is impossible to predict what will happen in each case if you change them.
However, it is worth trying if you want to see if you can get files to download a little faster. The process is covered in the above video.
The tester does indeed find an improvement in bandwidth using different DNS servers; this may or may not be the case for other people who try this. It requires reconfiguring the internet connection mostly as Default or Automatic, but changing to Custom just for the DNS servers and entering your own ones manually.
Google DNS 8. Bottom Line — Your download speeds may or may not improve by changing your servers. It depends on a lot of different factors; see the video above for a detailed test of all three servers.
The other two delivered worse bandwidth. Every situation will be different. Some cases of PS4 not reading discs issues are due to an unknown software bug. This can sometimes happen after a system update or a game update.
Outdated system software may also be a cause for some bugs so be sure to never skip system updates if they become available. Power down your console, unplug all cords, and hold the power button down for 30 seconds. Then, let it sit for at least two minutes before reattaching all the cables and powering on your system. Reinstall — Even physical games are installed on your console.
Eject the game, and navigate to its on-screen icon. A common solution is to try a different USB cable, in case the original one has failed. But Snellman says he observed a jaw droppingly small "receive window" when anything was running in the background on the PS4. Snellman says he ran two tests, the first with the download running in the foreground but a Netflix application running in the background.
When the Netflix app closed, the receive window increased significantly. So Snellman began a second test that introduced all kinds of different background functions to see what would happen. In one, the game Styx: Shards of Darkness idled in its title screen. That shrank the receive window to 7 KB. Snellman stresses this the artificial limit "appears to only apply to PSN downloads" — i. And, notably, running the console's built-in speed test will not reveal the reduced download capacity.
For me, this is one of the most maddening things, to see a download is taking forever, to check what is wrong with my network connection and be told everything is A-OK. A receive window of 7 KB "is an incredibly low value; it's basically going to cause the downloads to take times longer than they should," Snellman explains. Running an app such as Netflix or Spotify narrowed the receive window to KB, which is still "a 5x reduction in potential download speed," and playing an online match in a networked game closed it down to the 7 KB threshold.
Putting the PlayStation 4 into its rest mode "had no effect," he writes. Complicating matters is that the PlayStation 4 doesn't always make it clear what programs are running. Many users are accustomed to closing a game from the dashboard or being told the system is doing so when they boot up a new one while another is in the background, thinking that takes care of it.
But other applications, like Spotify or a streaming video service, can keep on going.
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