Peugeot 206 Forum. The place for your 1998-2012 Peugeot 206 questions and discussions! For owners and prospective owners only. 1,327 members. Stickies: Introduce Yourself To The 206 Community. ![]() Yes, I am still facing the same problem. Btw, I was going through the settings of my wifi(just moving here and there to discover my phone) and I found the following option unchecked: Keep WiFi on when screen times out Besides this, I have noticed that as soon I unlock my cellphone, the wifi signals are grey for a second and then they turn white. Do you think this could be the reason of the issue?Yes, you are not connected to your WiFi if you have that option unchecked. Whatsapp goes through internet and therefore, without WiFi, your phone is not receiving any Whatsapp messages when it is locked. Check that option and messages will come in fine. Yes, you are not connected to your WiFi if you have that option unchecked. Whatsapp goes through internet and therefore, without WiFi, your phone is not receiving any Whatsapp messages when it is locked. Check that option and messages will come in fine.Thank you. I unchecked that and so far I have been receiving the notifications:) The only problem that I am starting to face now is; its almost 4-5th time that I just received a message something like whatsapp notifications has stopped working and asking me to restart my phone to solve that problem. Just cuz of this reason I have restarted my phone these much times but still I have been receiving this error. Why is this so? Hello Friends, Why there has not been any proper pointers available on developing a highly scalable PushNotification system to a massive Windows Phone User base? Neither I could find any article talking about this requirement nor I get a proper reply from the Forums. I saw a feature called 'Notification Hub' - in the Azure world, but it's in preview & I think it's for Windows Store Apps only? There's not been clear message indicating we can use this for WindowsPhone 7. ![]() Throughout the article, they talk about PNS & WNS but not MSPSN. Are we going to get any proper support for this feature? I tried implementing my own Scalable Push service, using Thread Pools,.net Parallel concepts etc. But the performance has been really poor. It is taking so much time to complete a broadcast. Like, we have 50,000 client device, which is the right way to design a PushNotification service? Using Azure, should I create mulitple instance VMs for webroles and distribute this Pushing responsibility across a swarm of VMs? Download video naruto episode 418-425. Basically, a push request is nothing but a HTTPWeb request/ response. Azure VMs allows bandwidth from 5MBPS to 800MBPS. So my Scalability also relies on How many HTTPWeb request we can create within a 5MBPS b/w, which is given with Very Small Virtual Machine. (800MBPS is for Extra Large VMs). I would like to know How many requests can I flush through a 5MBPS bandwidth. Can we calculate this manually, just with the size of the request Header, Message & attributes? Also I would like to know if creating a C++ module would help? It could be better than.net counterparts on managing the Threadpools. So to summarize my questions: 1. Which is the best way to design a scalable push for Windows Phone 7, 8 devices? Allu arjun malayalam movie mp3 songs. Why not much people talking about this on the web? Multi-instance Azure webroles could help? A C++ module with high performance threadpoool for dispatching HTTPweb request can help? Azure Notification Hub is the answer for all these? What its 'dead slow' to you? Whats more important to you? Assurance that the message will be delivered or deliver 50000 notifications in under one second? If you want to deliver 50k notifications in under one second, then yes its probably going to be slow for you. But I dont see it taking hours to do so. Not sure whats the rate of delivery, and I don't seem to find any documentation on this. Still from what I've seen so far with some apps that have a massive number of users, like whatsapp for example, notifications comes almost instantly so I'm sure that the notification service is fast. And I dont think Azure is all that slow also. If you have the means, give it a test. The mobile services are free to use and you only pay for storage. The minimum for a small database is I think $5 so it would not cost you that much to run some tests. Please remember to mark the replies as answers if they help you. I dont think you can consider only your end. You need to understand that the Notifications Service is a service that is used by all apps that sends notifications to users. So you are just one more using it and I'm sure there are limits that must be in place not only to ensure service level but also to prevent abusing the system. Sending 50k instant messages to anyone is almost impossible. There is no SMS provider or email provider or notification service that will allow you to sent 50k notifications to 50k different devices in the time you want. But I may be wrong, and would love to know the result of your tests. Please remember to mark the replies as answers if they help you.
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