nanog mailing list archives

Re: Many players make up application performance (was Re: Richard Bennett, NANOG posting, and Integrity)


From: Corey Touchet <corey.touchet () corp totalserversolutions com>
Date: Tue, 29 Jul 2014 15:11:48 +0000

What I would like to see is someone who sets up a VPN that has an endpoint
path that¹s the same as NetFlix.  If their streaming performance improves
that would be very telling.  Heck you could use 2 machines and do a side
by side.


However I doubt Level3 is going to sit there and lie about their
connection to Verizon being overloaded, and for Verizon to do any kind of
meaningful QOS it would require an effort on the Level3 side of the
connection as well.




On 7/29/14, 8:33 AM, "McElearney, Kevin"
<Kevin_McElearney () cable comcast com> wrote:



On 7/28/14, 5:35 PM, "Jim Richardson" <weaselkeeper () gmail com> wrote:

I pay for (x) bits/sec up/down. From/to any eyecandysource.  If said
eyecandy origination can't handle the traffic, then I see a slowdown,
that's life.  But if <$IP_PROVIDER> throttles it specifically, rather
than throttling me to (x),I consider that fraud.

I didn't pay for (x) bits/sec from some whitelist of sources only.

Along with paying <$IP_PROVIDER> for (x) bits/sec up/down, you are also
paying (or the product of advertising) eyecandysource to deliver a service
(w/ a level of quality).  <$IP_PROVIDER> plays a big role in delivering
your *overall* Internet experience, but eyecandysource plays an even
bigger role delivering your *specific* eyecandy experience.  If
eyecandystore has internal challenges, business negotiation/policy
objectives, or uses poor adaptive routing path decisions, this has a
direct and material impact to your *specific* eyecandy experience (and
some have found fixable by hiding your source IP with a VPN).

While ISPs do play a big role in this, people tend to miss eyecandystore
decisions (and business drivers) as a potential factors in isolated
application performance issues.




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