That is just a bunch of more speculation.
lud
- the processing costs.
Source that it happens obviously.
You claimed that they connected to open networks.
Source?
Either way, open networks are very uncommon in residential areas (and honestly in general)
Agreed, China can produce garbage and it can produce amazing things.
The thing is that companies that outsource to China often want much cheaper manufacturing, which obviously results in lower quality.
They can produce stuff at the same quality and probably at a higher quantity as anyone else (except maybe for extremely specialised stuff which only 1 company in the world can do)
Why do you consider them to be the safest, any specific reason?
I have sent the money.
Consider it a bribe.
Bruh, are you putting a licence on every single comment? Lol.
What do you hope that will accomplish?
Btw, don't you actually have to say in the comment that the comment is licenced using "CC BY-NC-SA 4.0"? Just linking to it seems like it's not enough.
1 MB/s sounds really terrible. Doesn't seem right.
I haven't tried anything like that personally, but I don't think speeds should be affected that much. Latency should be the main problem.
I assume you are using a VPN; So which one are you using?
As far as I know there is absolutely nothing you can personally do on the WAN side of networking (at least on a normal home connection).
You can't use static routes in the way you're likely thinking.
You can only set up a static route for one hop away. So, static routes don't work over the internet, because there are a lot of routers (hops) in between the two home routers.
If you had a really long fiber cable that stretches all the way to your home in Asia it would work.
What you could do is set up a faster VPN like Wireguard and look for any bottlenecks or issues in either network.
Source code without comments is still way easier to read than machine code.
And there are very likely comments anyways.
Multiple Devs will work on the same code for years and of course they need or at least appreciate comments.
Why use your ISPs router then? Just buy your own.
And a webserver is probably the safest thing to put online.
You can also put the server in a DMZ and or use reverse proxy's and a bunch of other stuff.