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On April 16, between 2:25 P.M. ET and 4:12 P.M. ET, the domain zoom.us was not available due to a server block by GoDaddy Registry. This block was the result of a communication error between Zoom’s domain registrar, Markmonitor, and GoDaddy Registry, which resulted in GoDaddy Registry mistakenly shutting down zoom.us domain. Zoom, Markmonitor, and GoDaddy worked quickly to identify and remove the block, which restored service to the domain zoom.us. There was no product, security or network failure at Zoom during the outage. GoDaddy and Markmonitor are working together to prevent this from happening again.

Bandwidth?

mfbrown
Newcomer
Newcomer

I am hosting a meeting between the US and India and will be using an internet connection that is 4MB - 12MB. will that be strong enough to have a clear, consistent signal?

1 REPLY 1

Ray_Harwood
Community Champion | Customer
Community Champion | Customer

Welcome to the Zoom Community, @mfbrown.

 

Bandwidth required for adequate Zoom meetings is surprisingly small.  See the Bandwidth section of this Zoom Support article for some details:

https://support.zoom.com/hc/en/article?id=zm_kb&sysparm_article=KB0060748#h_d278c327-e03d-4896-b19a-...

 

Keep in mind that they're talking about your bandwidth, which ultimately feeds your information to (and receives information from) the Zoom Servers, which lie in between you and your attendees.  Zoom has an incredible network of data centers around the world, and while some of your more far-reaching international attendees might see a bit of a delay... they shouldn't notice it, since it should mostly be a consistent delay across continents.

 

4MB to 12MB should be sufficient.  When possible, use a wired connection to your network, as WiFi congestion is the most often-encountered issue.


Ray -- check out the GoodClix website or the Z-SPAN website.