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Click on Performance tab, then Network (like in my picture above. Maximum is dependent on your Internet provider, and if the line is flat, maximum is reached (yours, or on the download site)
Your looking at the traffic on the PC not the internet to see the internet you need to see it on the router as all traffic goes via that unless you only have one device connected
Sorry for the confusion, guys.
Correct. I wanted to measure the traffic in all machines. How this can be performed?
Windows 10 can do per machine stats:
View Network Data Usage Details in Windows 10 | Tutorials
Last edited by Brink; 25 Dec 2018 at 09:03. Reason: added tutorial link for more info
You would have to have all traffic go through a Proxy, such as a Raspberry Pi or another computer that can monitor the traffic and you can pull reports. Here is one project. Raspberry Pi OLED Internet Bandwidth Display: 3 Steps
Another. Raspberry Pi as a Network Monitoring Node | Network World Another. Network Monitoring with Raspberry Pi, Part 1: Cacti Great White WiFi