nanog mailing list archives
Re: The next broadband killer: advanced operating systems?
From: Mikael Abrahamsson <swmike () swm pp se>
Date: Tue, 23 Oct 2007 10:43:38 +0200 (CEST)
On Tue, 23 Oct 2007, Sam Stickland wrote:
servers. From this little bit of evidence I can blazenly extrpolate to suggest that maximum bandwidth consumption is currently limited to some noticable degree by the lack of widely deployed TCP window size tuning. Links that are currently uncongested might suddenly see a sizable amount of extra traffic.
So, do we think that traffic will have a higher peak due to this (more traffic at peak time compared to low time), or that people will actually transfer more data because they get higher thruput?
I don't see it as natural that people will transfer more data totally because they get higher thruput.
-- Mikael Abrahamsson email: swmike () swm pp se
Current thread:
- The next broadband killer: advanced operating systems? Leo Bicknell (Oct 21)
- Re: The next broadband killer: advanced operating systems? Sam Stickland (Oct 22)
- Re: The next broadband killer: advanced operating systems? Mikael Abrahamsson (Oct 22)
- Re: The next broadband killer: advanced operating systems? Leo Bicknell (Oct 22)
- Re: The next broadband killer: advanced operating systems? Sam Stickland (Oct 23)
- Re: The next broadband killer: advanced operating systems? Mikael Abrahamsson (Oct 23)
- Re: The next broadband killer: advanced operating systems? Adrian Chadd (Oct 23)
- Re: The next broadband killer: advanced operating systems? Sam Stickland (Oct 23)
- Re: The next broadband killer: advanced operating systems? Mikael Abrahamsson (Oct 22)
- Re: The next broadband killer: advanced operating systems? Sam Stickland (Oct 22)
- Re: The next broadband killer: advanced operating systems? Valdis . Kletnieks (Oct 22)
- ratio fixer (was: advanced OSes tcp++;) Jared Mauch (Oct 23)