This went by in a previous posting I made: Ookla may have made themselves long term irrelevant by their recent behavior. When your customers start funding development of a replacement (as Comcast has), you know they aren't happy. So I don't sweat Ookla: helping out the Comcast test effort is probably the best way to get bufferbloat in front of everyone, and best yet, the code for the tests is out there. - Jim On Sun, Nov 27, 2016 at 9:11 PM, Kathleen Nichols wrote: > > I never have any problem hearing you, Dave. > > Random stuff in-line. > > On 11/27/16 1:24 PM, Dave Taht wrote: > > There *are* 430+ other minds on this mailing list, and probably a few > > AIs. > > > > Sometimes I worry that most of our postings go into spamboxes now, > > or that we've somehow completely burned people out since our heyday > > in 2012. > > > > knock, knock - is this mic on? > > > > On Sat, Nov 26, 2016 at 7:33 AM, Rich Brown > > wrote: > ... > >> > >> My impression is that we have reached a strong technical point. We > >> have solved some really hard, really significant problems. We are > >> in a position to Declare Victory on a large part of the problem, > >> even though there are loads of details to clean up. > > I think this is important. Some really good work has been done by a lot of > people on this list and I have found it interesting, enlightening and > gratifying to > put some small bit of a solution out there and have people grab it, > improve it, > add to it and make it real. So I think people doing that work should pat > themselves on the > back. > >> > >> Most of the suggestions in this thread deal with Getting the Word > >> Out. That's good - that's the declaring victory part. The bad news > >> is that this is not our collective skill set. > > So that's the hard part. Who do you need to Get the Word Out to and what > do you expect them to do? It sounds like there are some edge router > improvements coming. It's possible that some companies are using the > work but they are advertising what it does for the customer not where it > came from or what it is technically. So that might be a victory. > >> > ... > >> 4) Do we know people at any of the cell phone companies, or router > >> vendors on whom we could try one last push? > >> > >> As part of organizing my thoughts for this note, I also collected > >> the following ideas from this thread. I add my $0.02 below. > > Well, getting cellular networks on board would be a coup. > >> > >> Rich > >> > >> 1) I don't see that Ookla has much incentive to include bufferbloat > >> measurements in their test, since they private-label it for lots of > >> ISPs who (presumably) wouldn't want their CPE to be proven crappy. > >> ("It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his > >> salary depends upon his not understanding it!" -Upton Sinclair) > > This is, sadly, likely correct. > >> > >> 2) The gamer community seems like such a perfect target for these > >> improvements. But I fear that the thought leaders are so wrapped up > >> in the fame generated by their own clever QoS tricks that they > >> can't believe that fq_codel plus the make-wifi-fast fixes could > >> possibly address such a complicated subject. (Upton Sinclair, > >> again.) > > But where do you find who benefits and who can have an effect? I don't > know anything about these traffic patterns but would be interested in > seeing them if possible. > >> > >> 3) On the other hand, Comcast (whose DOCSIS modems *might* someday > >> support PIE or other SQM) is in a position to benefit from an > >> increased awareness of the phenomenon, leaving a little ray of > >> hope. > > I don't know. I think it has to be a more serious goal at Comcast. The > bufferbloat measurement devices they sent out were electrically > problematic, taking our signal down and reducing bandwidth. This seems > like one step above skunkworks. > ... > >> 6) It *is* a good idea to think about attracting the attention of > >> vendors who are hurt by bufferbloat - VoIP, video streaming folks, > >> gaming companies, etc. But it feels like the wrong end of the lever > >> - a gaming company can't fix crappy CPE, and they're stuck saying > > Yes, it's hard for the victims unless there is an alternative or they > wield a large amount of coordinated monetary power. The video streaming > folks, from my measurements, are trashing themselves. Why are they > creating such huge bursts? Why send out bursts that are going to arrive > at the same time? This isn't a bufferbloat problem really, it's a clue > problem. > >> > >> 7) Cell phones are another place that obviously would benefit, > >> although, again, it's hard to break through the notion that "It's > >> always been like that..." > > Yes, but who would benefit? Is it a content company that could put > pressure on some carrier? > >> > >> What else? > > This is good thinking, Rich, but the business side of the current > "ecosystem" seems disincentivized to progress. > >> > >> Rich > >> > >> _______________________________________________ Bloat mailing list > >> Bloat@lists.bufferbloat.net > >> https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/bloat > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Bloat mailing list > Bloat@lists.bufferbloat.net > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/bloat >