The operation of disabling the QoS (Quality of Service) service, which reserves a certain amount of network bandwidth for critical applications, can be performed by the user without the involvement of additional third-party software, but will require the use of a computer administrator account.
Instructions
Step 1
Press the Ctrl + Alt + Del function keys at the same time to log on with the computer administrator account and enter Administrator in the account selection field.
Step 2
Specify the corresponding password that was saved during the installation of the operating system and click the "Start" button to bring up the main OS Windows menu.
Step 3
Go to Run and enter gpedit.msc in the Open field to launch the Group Policy Editor tool.
Step 4
Click OK to confirm the launch and go to the Local Computer Policy tab.
Step 5
Select Computer Configuration and expand the Administrative Templates link.
Step 6
Specify the "Network" group and go to the "QoS Package Manager" item.
Step 7
Open the "Limit the reserved bandwidth" section by double-clicking on the right side of the application window and apply the checkbox to the "Enabled" field in the dialog box that opens.
Step 8
Reduce the fallback bandwidth to zero from the default 20 percent, or uncheck the Enabled box to completely disable the manager.
Step 9
Exit the Group Policy Editor tool and restart your computer to apply the selected changes.
Step 10
Note that using a check box other than the Not Selected box will automatically set the reservation to 20 percent of the network bandwidth.
Step 11
Go to the "Computer" folder and expand the "Network Connections" link to determine the effectiveness of the operation performed to disable the QoS packet service.
Step 12
Find a connection that can be used without restrictions and open its context menu by clicking the right mouse button.
Step 13
Select the "Properties" item and go to the "Network" tab of the properties dialog box that opens.
Step 14
Make sure QoS is enabled and running.