A while ago I changed from mean to median with the reasoning being that one spike to a crazy level was not representative of bloat but instead representative of a network stall or other anomaly. Graphs that were nearly all good samples with one outlier were being unfairly graded poorly. But this example has the opposite issue - the median of this set of samples is the first half where everything is ok. Hence the good score. Using a mean would be correct for this sample. What should happen is to throw away a couple (max) outliers first, then do a mean to avoid punishing the results that come in as good but include one errant measurement. thanks -Justin On Wed, Oct 12, 2016 at 11:16 PM, Dave Taht wrote: > This has major bloat happening at the end of the upload test. Which > worries me - here, at a gbit. > > http://www.dslreports.com/speedtest/5284047 > > -- > Dave Täht > Let's go make home routers and wifi faster! With better software! > http://blog.cerowrt.org > _______________________________________________ > Bloat mailing list > Bloat@lists.bufferbloat.net > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/bloat >