[101541] in North American Network Operators' Group

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Re: ISPs slowing P2P traffic...

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Joe St Sauver)
Wed Jan 9 17:44:45 2008

Date: Wed, 9 Jan 2008 14:15:16 -0800
From: Joe St Sauver <joe@oregon.uoregon.edu>
Reply-To: joe@oregon.uoregon.edu
To: jared@puck.nether.net
CC: nanog@merit.edu
Errors-To: owner-nanog@merit.edu


Jared mentioned:

#	We'll see what happens, and how the 160Mb/s DOCSIS 3.0 connections
#and infrastructure to support it pan out on the comcast side..

There may be comparatively little difference from what you see today, 
largely because most hosts still have stacks which are poorly tuned by 
default, or host throughput is limited by some other device in the path 
(such as a broadband "router") which acts by default as the constricting 
link in the chain, or the application itself isn't written to take full
advantage of higher speed wide area connections. 

Depending on your point of view, all those poorly tuned hosts are either a 
incredible PITA, or the only thing that's keeping the boat above water. 

If you believe the latter point of view, tuning guides such as
http://www.psc.edu/networking/projects/tcptune/ and diagnostic tools
like NDT (e.g., see http://miranda.ctd.anl.gov:7123/ ) are incredibly
seditious resources. :-)

Regards,

Joe St Sauver (joe@oregon.uoregon.edu)

Disclaimer: all opinions strictly my own.

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