* [Bloat] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: [Starlink] Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
@ 2025-09-30 20:24 James Forster
2025-09-30 20:48 ` Frantisek Borsik
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: James Forster @ 2025-09-30 20:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Frantisek Borsik; +Cc: Cake List, bloat, codel, Jeremy Austin via Rpm, libreqos
Wow, that’s fantastic, Frantisek! Great work making this happen.
These sort of titles aren’t my favorite. I think I understand the sentiment but find the issues more nuanced than that. :-)
If you can get clear audio, not much quality is needed for panels and talking beads. Best would be a feed right into an iPhone/android.
Jim
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: [Starlink] Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-09-30 20:24 [Bloat] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: [Starlink] Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16) James Forster
@ 2025-09-30 20:48 ` Frantisek Borsik
2025-10-01 19:24 ` dan
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: Frantisek Borsik @ 2025-09-30 20:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: James Forster, Jason Livingood
Cc: Cake List, bloat, codel, Jeremy Austin via Rpm, libreqos
Thanks, Jim. Well, true that - but I wanted to do it either way, because of
our dear Dave and - as a conversation starter.
As @Jason Livingood <jason_livingood@comcast.com> said - "Bandwidth is
dead. Long live latency."
https://pulse.internetsociety.org/blog/bandwidth-is-dead-long-live-latency
I will do my best to get the audio/video right and to share it with you all.
PS: Sending you separate email.
All the best,
Frank
Frantisek (Frank) Borsik
*In loving memory of Dave Täht: *1965-2025
https://libreqos.io/2025/04/01/in-loving-memory-of-dave/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/frantisekborsik
Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp: +421919416714
iMessage, mobile: +420775230885
Skype: casioa5302ca
frantisek.borsik@gmail.com
On Tue, Sep 30, 2025 at 10:25 PM James Forster <jim@connectivitycap.com>
wrote:
> Wow, that’s fantastic, Frantisek! Great work making this happen.
>
> These sort of titles aren’t my favorite. I think I understand the
> sentiment but find the issues more nuanced than that. :-)
>
> If you can get clear audio, not much quality is needed for panels and
> talking beads. Best would be a feed right into an iPhone/android.
>
> Jim
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: [Starlink] Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-09-30 20:48 ` Frantisek Borsik
@ 2025-10-01 19:24 ` dan
2025-10-01 21:32 ` Frantisek Borsik
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: dan @ 2025-10-01 19:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Frantisek Borsik
Cc: James Forster, Jason Livingood, Cake List, bloat, codel,
Jeremy Austin via Rpm, libreqos
I actually really like the title ;)
It's that most of the time people are told they need more bandwidth to
solve a problem, when they really need lower latency and jitter. So the
vast majority of the time 'more bandwidth' as a solution really is a lie.
On Tue, Sep 30, 2025 at 2:47 PM Frantisek Borsik via LibreQoS <
libreqos@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
> Thanks, Jim. Well, true that - but I wanted to do it either way, because of
> our dear Dave and - as a conversation starter.
> As @Jason Livingood <jason_livingood@comcast.com> said - "Bandwidth is
> dead. Long live latency."
> https://pulse.internetsociety.org/blog/bandwidth-is-dead-long-live-latency
>
> I will do my best to get the audio/video right and to share it with you
> all.
>
> PS: Sending you separate email.
>
> All the best,
>
> Frank
>
> Frantisek (Frank) Borsik
>
>
> *In loving memory of Dave Täht: *1965-2025
>
> https://libreqos.io/2025/04/01/in-loving-memory-of-dave/
>
>
> https://www.linkedin.com/in/frantisekborsik
>
> Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp: +421919416714
>
> iMessage, mobile: +420775230885
>
> Skype: casioa5302ca
>
> frantisek.borsik@gmail.com
>
>
> On Tue, Sep 30, 2025 at 10:25 PM James Forster <jim@connectivitycap.com>
> wrote:
>
> > Wow, that’s fantastic, Frantisek! Great work making this happen.
> >
> > These sort of titles aren’t my favorite. I think I understand the
> > sentiment but find the issues more nuanced than that. :-)
> >
> > If you can get clear audio, not much quality is needed for panels and
> > talking beads. Best would be a feed right into an iPhone/android.
> >
> > Jim
> _______________________________________________
> LibreQoS mailing list -- libreqos@lists.bufferbloat.net
> To unsubscribe send an email to libreqos-leave@lists.bufferbloat.net
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: [Starlink] Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-10-01 19:24 ` dan
@ 2025-10-01 21:32 ` Frantisek Borsik
2025-11-07 10:53 ` Frantisek Borsik
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: Frantisek Borsik @ 2025-10-01 21:32 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: dan
Cc: James Forster, Jason Livingood, Cake List, bloat, codel,
Jeremy Austin via Rpm, libreqos
Let's say that I love it, channeling my inner Dave Taht. But there were a
couple of voices asking if I won't consider to change it a bit, to be "less
hostile" to our "bandwidth is king!" friends...and I was trying, but this
was really sticky and I'm happy that it stayed this way.
All the best,
Frank
Frantisek (Frank) Borsik
*In loving memory of Dave Täht: *1965-2025
https://libreqos.io/2025/04/01/in-loving-memory-of-dave/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/frantisekborsik
Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp: +421919416714
iMessage, mobile: +420775230885
Skype: casioa5302ca
frantisek.borsik@gmail.com
On Wed, Oct 1, 2025 at 9:25 PM dan <dandenson@gmail.com> wrote:
> I actually really like the title ;)
>
> It's that most of the time people are told they need more bandwidth to
> solve a problem, when they really need lower latency and jitter. So the
> vast majority of the time 'more bandwidth' as a solution really is a lie.
>
> On Tue, Sep 30, 2025 at 2:47 PM Frantisek Borsik via LibreQoS <
> libreqos@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
>
>> Thanks, Jim. Well, true that - but I wanted to do it either way, because
>> of
>> our dear Dave and - as a conversation starter.
>> As @Jason Livingood <jason_livingood@comcast.com> said - "Bandwidth is
>> dead. Long live latency."
>> https://pulse.internetsociety.org/blog/bandwidth-is-dead-long-live-latency
>>
>> I will do my best to get the audio/video right and to share it with you
>> all.
>>
>> PS: Sending you separate email.
>>
>> All the best,
>>
>> Frank
>>
>> Frantisek (Frank) Borsik
>>
>>
>> *In loving memory of Dave Täht: *1965-2025
>>
>> https://libreqos.io/2025/04/01/in-loving-memory-of-dave/
>>
>>
>> https://www.linkedin.com/in/frantisekborsik
>>
>> Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp: +421919416714
>>
>> iMessage, mobile: +420775230885
>>
>> Skype: casioa5302ca
>>
>> frantisek.borsik@gmail.com
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Sep 30, 2025 at 10:25 PM James Forster <jim@connectivitycap.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>> > Wow, that’s fantastic, Frantisek! Great work making this happen.
>> >
>> > These sort of titles aren’t my favorite. I think I understand the
>> > sentiment but find the issues more nuanced than that. :-)
>> >
>> > If you can get clear audio, not much quality is needed for panels and
>> > talking beads. Best would be a feed right into an iPhone/android.
>> >
>> > Jim
>> _______________________________________________
>> LibreQoS mailing list -- libreqos@lists.bufferbloat.net
>> To unsubscribe send an email to libreqos-leave@lists.bufferbloat.net
>>
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: [Starlink] Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-10-01 21:32 ` Frantisek Borsik
@ 2025-11-07 10:53 ` Frantisek Borsik
2025-11-07 16:19 ` [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] " Jim Forster
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: Frantisek Borsik @ 2025-11-07 10:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Cake List, bloat, codel, Jeremy Austin via Rpm, libreqos,
Dave Taht via Starlink, l4s-discuss
Hello to all,
Recording of our QoE/QoS panel discussion is out! It was really great and
believe you will like it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1VET0VYQ6c
We have touch bandwidth, L4S, Starlink and more.
Here are the slides with additional reading:
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1ML0I3Av3DCtQDiP8Djr_YGH2r4-UDZP25VEk-xyJcZE/edit?slide=id.p#slide=id.p
We hope to continue this conversation into more practical, demo-like
environment of sort, that we can see at IETF Hackathon and used to see in
the early WISPA event days, with Animal Farm.
All the best,
Frank
Frantisek (Frank) Borsik
*In loving memory of Dave Täht: *1965-2025
https://libreqos.io/2025/04/01/in-loving-memory-of-dave/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/frantisekborsik
Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp: +421919416714
iMessage, mobile: +420775230885
Skype: casioa5302ca
frantisek.borsik@gmail.com
On Wed, Oct 1, 2025 at 11:32 PM Frantisek Borsik <frantisek.borsik@gmail.com>
wrote:
> Let's say that I love it, channeling my inner Dave Taht. But there were a
> couple of voices asking if I won't consider to change it a bit, to be "less
> hostile" to our "bandwidth is king!" friends...and I was trying, but this
> was really sticky and I'm happy that it stayed this way.
>
>
> All the best,
>
> Frank
>
> Frantisek (Frank) Borsik
>
>
> *In loving memory of Dave Täht: *1965-2025
>
> https://libreqos.io/2025/04/01/in-loving-memory-of-dave/
>
>
> https://www.linkedin.com/in/frantisekborsik
>
> Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp: +421919416714
>
> iMessage, mobile: +420775230885
>
> Skype: casioa5302ca
>
> frantisek.borsik@gmail.com
>
>
> On Wed, Oct 1, 2025 at 9:25 PM dan <dandenson@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> I actually really like the title ;)
>>
>> It's that most of the time people are told they need more bandwidth to
>> solve a problem, when they really need lower latency and jitter. So the
>> vast majority of the time 'more bandwidth' as a solution really is a lie.
>>
>> On Tue, Sep 30, 2025 at 2:47 PM Frantisek Borsik via LibreQoS <
>> libreqos@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
>>
>>> Thanks, Jim. Well, true that - but I wanted to do it either way, because
>>> of
>>> our dear Dave and - as a conversation starter.
>>> As @Jason Livingood <jason_livingood@comcast.com> said - "Bandwidth is
>>> dead. Long live latency."
>>>
>>> https://pulse.internetsociety.org/blog/bandwidth-is-dead-long-live-latency
>>>
>>> I will do my best to get the audio/video right and to share it with you
>>> all.
>>>
>>> PS: Sending you separate email.
>>>
>>> All the best,
>>>
>>> Frank
>>>
>>> Frantisek (Frank) Borsik
>>>
>>>
>>> *In loving memory of Dave Täht: *1965-2025
>>>
>>> https://libreqos.io/2025/04/01/in-loving-memory-of-dave/
>>>
>>>
>>> https://www.linkedin.com/in/frantisekborsik
>>>
>>> Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp: +421919416714
>>>
>>> iMessage, mobile: +420775230885
>>>
>>> Skype: casioa5302ca
>>>
>>> frantisek.borsik@gmail.com
>>>
>>>
>>> On Tue, Sep 30, 2025 at 10:25 PM James Forster <jim@connectivitycap.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>> > Wow, that’s fantastic, Frantisek! Great work making this happen.
>>> >
>>> > These sort of titles aren’t my favorite. I think I understand the
>>> > sentiment but find the issues more nuanced than that. :-)
>>> >
>>> > If you can get clear audio, not much quality is needed for panels and
>>> > talking beads. Best would be a feed right into an iPhone/android.
>>> >
>>> > Jim
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> LibreQoS mailing list -- libreqos@lists.bufferbloat.net
>>> To unsubscribe send an email to libreqos-leave@lists.bufferbloat.net
>>>
>>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] Re: Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-11-07 10:53 ` Frantisek Borsik
@ 2025-11-07 16:19 ` Jim Forster
2025-11-07 17:52 ` [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] " J Pan
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: Jim Forster @ 2025-11-07 16:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Frantisek Borsik; +Cc: Cake List, bloat, codel, libreqos, l4s-discuss, starlink
Frank — I’m watching it now, Great job pulling this group together, and nice, balanced opening statement.
— Jim
> On Nov 7, 2025, at 5:53 AM, Frantisek Borsik via Starlink <starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
>
>
> Recording of our QoE/QoS panel discussion is out! It was really great and
> believe you will like it:
>
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1VET0VYQ6c
>
> We have touch bandwidth, L4S, Starlink and more.
>
> Here are the slides with additional reading:
> https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1ML0I3Av3DCtQDiP8Djr_YGH2r4-UDZP25VEk-xyJcZE/edit?slide=id.p#slide=id.p
>
> We hope to continue this conversation into more practical, demo-like
> environment of sort, that we can see at IETF Hackathon and used to see in
> the early WISPA event days, with Animal Farm.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-11-07 16:19 ` [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] " Jim Forster
@ 2025-11-07 17:52 ` J Pan
2025-11-07 18:55 ` [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] " Jim Forster
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: J Pan @ 2025-11-07 17:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Jim Forster
Cc: Frantisek Borsik, Cake List, bloat, codel, libreqos, l4s-discuss,
starlink
latency is based on round-trip time, and one-way delay includes
transmission delay, propagation delay, queuing delay and processing
delay. bandwidth does affect transmission delay (or serialization
delay), propagation delay is determined by the link length and the
"travel" speed of the signal, queuing delay is the hardest part and
affected by the buffer bloat a lot, and processing delay is another
variable. of course, transmission delay takes less and less portion of
the end-to-end delay now due to higher and higher "speed" links
consumers may mistaken the speed of the link (the "width" of their
pipe) as how fast their internet is (the "length" of the pipe), due to
the poor terminology we have been using ;-)
--
J Pan, UVic CSc, ECS566, 250-472-5796 (NO VM), Pan@UVic.CA, Web.UVic.CA/~pan
On Fri, Nov 7, 2025 at 8:19 AM Jim Forster via Starlink
<starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
>
> Frank — I’m watching it now, Great job pulling this group together, and nice, balanced opening statement.
>
> — Jim
>
> > On Nov 7, 2025, at 5:53 AM, Frantisek Borsik via Starlink <starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
> >
> >
> > Recording of our QoE/QoS panel discussion is out! It was really great and
> > believe you will like it:
> >
> > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1VET0VYQ6c
> >
> > We have touch bandwidth, L4S, Starlink and more.
> >
> > Here are the slides with additional reading:
> > https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1ML0I3Av3DCtQDiP8Djr_YGH2r4-UDZP25VEk-xyJcZE/edit?slide=id.p#slide=id.p
> >
> > We hope to continue this conversation into more practical, demo-like
> > environment of sort, that we can see at IETF Hackathon and used to see in
> > the early WISPA event days, with Animal Farm.
>
> _______________________________________________
> Starlink mailing list -- starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net
> To unsubscribe send an email to starlink-leave@lists.bufferbloat.net
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] Re: Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-11-07 17:52 ` [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] " J Pan
@ 2025-11-07 18:55 ` Jim Forster
2025-11-07 19:50 ` J Pan
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: Jim Forster @ 2025-11-07 18:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: J Pan
Cc: Frantisek Borsik, Cake List, bloat, codel, libreqos, l4s-discuss,
starlink
Exactly so.
Consumer expectations and service provider marketing may be influenced by memories of experience when transmission delay did matter. At one time I was very happy with my home ISDN connection, and even shared it with my neighbor. At about 128kbs, it was three orders of magnitude slower than my home fiber link. I’ve not run the numbers but I’m pretty sure transimission speed mattered for video, even for crummy quality video, So then when I learned a bit about digital video, and cable’s 64 QAM 27mbps channels, I got excited and thought, “wow, they could deliver 1mbps service! And wouldn’t it be cool to have 1M home online at 10x the speed of ISDN?”. It was cool! And two more orders of magnitude later, here we are.
— Jim
> On Nov 7, 2025, at 12:52 PM, J Pan <Pan@uvic.ca> wrote:
>
> latency is based on round-trip time, and one-way delay includes
> transmission delay, propagation delay, queuing delay and processing
> delay. bandwidth does affect transmission delay (or serialization
> delay), propagation delay is determined by the link length and the
> "travel" speed of the signal, queuing delay is the hardest part and
> affected by the buffer bloat a lot, and processing delay is another
> variable. of course, transmission delay takes less and less portion of
> the end-to-end delay now due to higher and higher "speed" links
>
> consumers may mistaken the speed of the link (the "width" of their
> pipe) as how fast their internet is (the "length" of the pipe), due to
> the poor terminology we have been using ;-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] Re: Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-11-07 18:55 ` [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] " Jim Forster
@ 2025-11-07 19:50 ` J Pan
2025-11-08 16:00 ` [Bloat] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: [Starlink] " dan
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: J Pan @ 2025-11-07 19:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Jim Forster
Cc: Frantisek Borsik, Cake List, bloat, codel, libreqos, l4s-discuss,
starlink
marketing is even worse. some claim 200mbps because 150mbps down and
50mbps up at peak data rate. of course, this is not the only problem
in telecom, but likely the worst
nevertheless, there are stats such as 10% inflation for food and 20%
for gas, so in total 30% ;-) at this rate, any numbers can be floating
around but none are telling the truth ;-)
--
J Pan, UVic CSc, ECS566, 250-472-5796 (NO VM), Pan@UVic.CA, Web.UVic.CA/~pan
On Fri, Nov 7, 2025 at 10:55 AM Jim Forster <jim@connectivitycap.com> wrote:
>
> Exactly so.
>
> Consumer expectations and service provider marketing may be influenced by memories of experience when transmission delay did matter. At one time I was very happy with my home ISDN connection, and even shared it with my neighbor. At about 128kbs, it was three orders of magnitude slower than my home fiber link. I’ve not run the numbers but I’m pretty sure transimission speed mattered for video, even for crummy quality video, So then when I learned a bit about digital video, and cable’s 64 QAM 27mbps channels, I got excited and thought, “wow, they could deliver 1mbps service! And wouldn’t it be cool to have 1M home online at 10x the speed of ISDN?”. It was cool! And two more orders of magnitude later, here we are.
>
> — Jim
>
> On Nov 7, 2025, at 12:52 PM, J Pan <Pan@uvic.ca> wrote:
>
> latency is based on round-trip time, and one-way delay includes
> transmission delay, propagation delay, queuing delay and processing
> delay. bandwidth does affect transmission delay (or serialization
> delay), propagation delay is determined by the link length and the
> "travel" speed of the signal, queuing delay is the hardest part and
> affected by the buffer bloat a lot, and processing delay is another
> variable. of course, transmission delay takes less and less portion of
> the end-to-end delay now due to higher and higher "speed" links
>
> consumers may mistaken the speed of the link (the "width" of their
> pipe) as how fast their internet is (the "length" of the pipe), due to
> the poor terminology we have been using ;-)
>
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: [Starlink] Re: Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-11-07 19:50 ` J Pan
@ 2025-11-08 16:00 ` dan
2025-11-08 17:03 ` J Pan
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: dan @ 2025-11-08 16:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: J Pan
Cc: Jim Forster, Frantisek Borsik, Cake List, bloat, codel, libreqos,
l4s-discuss, starlink
I'm starting to see the signs that raw bandwidth is starting to lose
it's dominance for marketing. It's still the clear #1 ask but price
is rapidly overtaking speed for our customer requests.
I believe we've hit this era's threshold on throughput needs and
people have started to notice that 'more' doesn't feel like a faster
service.
one common scenario that we are using to win customers, in combination
with facebook testimonials, is that people have bad experiences with
wifi and they order a faster service from cable/fiber company and the
wifi just gets worse. This scenario I think is incredibly common and
seems to be a catalyst for 'speed isn't everything'. We come in with
50-500Mbps of service and solid whole-home wifi and they are
converted.
I hope we're not to far off from having 'speed' be just a feature, not
the entire story.
and yes, we QoE or service with cake via libreqos which is the
difference between great service and inadequate service IMO.
On Fri, Nov 7, 2025 at 12:50 PM J Pan via LibreQoS
<libreqos@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
>
> marketing is even worse. some claim 200mbps because 150mbps down and
> 50mbps up at peak data rate. of course, this is not the only problem
> in telecom, but likely the worst
>
> nevertheless, there are stats such as 10% inflation for food and 20%
> for gas, so in total 30% ;-) at this rate, any numbers can be floating
> around but none are telling the truth ;-)
> --
> J Pan, UVic CSc, ECS566, 250-472-5796 (NO VM), Pan@UVic.CA, Web.UVic.CA/~pan
>
> On Fri, Nov 7, 2025 at 10:55 AM Jim Forster <jim@connectivitycap.com> wrote:
> >
> > Exactly so.
> >
> > Consumer expectations and service provider marketing may be influenced by memories of experience when transmission delay did matter. At one time I was very happy with my home ISDN connection, and even shared it with my neighbor. At about 128kbs, it was three orders of magnitude slower than my home fiber link. I’ve not run the numbers but I’m pretty sure transimission speed mattered for video, even for crummy quality video, So then when I learned a bit about digital video, and cable’s 64 QAM 27mbps channels, I got excited and thought, “wow, they could deliver 1mbps service! And wouldn’t it be cool to have 1M home online at 10x the speed of ISDN?”. It was cool! And two more orders of magnitude later, here we are.
> >
> > — Jim
> >
> > On Nov 7, 2025, at 12:52 PM, J Pan <Pan@uvic.ca> wrote:
> >
> > latency is based on round-trip time, and one-way delay includes
> > transmission delay, propagation delay, queuing delay and processing
> > delay. bandwidth does affect transmission delay (or serialization
> > delay), propagation delay is determined by the link length and the
> > "travel" speed of the signal, queuing delay is the hardest part and
> > affected by the buffer bloat a lot, and processing delay is another
> > variable. of course, transmission delay takes less and less portion of
> > the end-to-end delay now due to higher and higher "speed" links
> >
> > consumers may mistaken the speed of the link (the "width" of their
> > pipe) as how fast their internet is (the "length" of the pipe), due to
> > the poor terminology we have been using ;-)
> >
> >
> _______________________________________________
> LibreQoS mailing list -- libreqos@lists.bufferbloat.net
> To unsubscribe send an email to libreqos-leave@lists.bufferbloat.net
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: [Starlink] Re: Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-11-08 16:00 ` [Bloat] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: [Starlink] " dan
@ 2025-11-08 17:03 ` J Pan
2025-11-08 18:11 ` [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] " Sebastian Moeller
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: J Pan @ 2025-11-08 17:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: dan
Cc: Jim Forster, Frantisek Borsik, Cake List, bloat, codel, libreqos,
l4s-discuss, starlink
yes, availability (at least two competing network providers with
reliable services), affordability (so the competition to bring the
price and cost down) and applicability to modern internet applications
(video streaming, conferencing and gaming in addition to email and web
browsing) shall be the user-centric metrics in addition to throughput,
latency/jitter, packet loss, etc
--
J Pan, UVic CSc, ECS566, 250-472-5796 (NO VM), Pan@UVic.CA, Web.UVic.CA/~pan
On Sat, Nov 8, 2025 at 8:00 AM dan <dandenson@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I'm starting to see the signs that raw bandwidth is starting to lose
> it's dominance for marketing. It's still the clear #1 ask but price
> is rapidly overtaking speed for our customer requests.
>
> I believe we've hit this era's threshold on throughput needs and
> people have started to notice that 'more' doesn't feel like a faster
> service.
>
> one common scenario that we are using to win customers, in combination
> with facebook testimonials, is that people have bad experiences with
> wifi and they order a faster service from cable/fiber company and the
> wifi just gets worse. This scenario I think is incredibly common and
> seems to be a catalyst for 'speed isn't everything'. We come in with
> 50-500Mbps of service and solid whole-home wifi and they are
> converted.
>
> I hope we're not to far off from having 'speed' be just a feature, not
> the entire story.
>
> and yes, we QoE or service with cake via libreqos which is the
> difference between great service and inadequate service IMO.
>
> On Fri, Nov 7, 2025 at 12:50 PM J Pan via LibreQoS
> <libreqos@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
> >
> > marketing is even worse. some claim 200mbps because 150mbps down and
> > 50mbps up at peak data rate. of course, this is not the only problem
> > in telecom, but likely the worst
> >
> > nevertheless, there are stats such as 10% inflation for food and 20%
> > for gas, so in total 30% ;-) at this rate, any numbers can be floating
> > around but none are telling the truth ;-)
> > --
> > J Pan, UVic CSc, ECS566, 250-472-5796 (NO VM), Pan@UVic.CA, Web.UVic.CA/~pan
> >
> > On Fri, Nov 7, 2025 at 10:55 AM Jim Forster <jim@connectivitycap.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > Exactly so.
> > >
> > > Consumer expectations and service provider marketing may be influenced by memories of experience when transmission delay did matter. At one time I was very happy with my home ISDN connection, and even shared it with my neighbor. At about 128kbs, it was three orders of magnitude slower than my home fiber link. I’ve not run the numbers but I’m pretty sure transimission speed mattered for video, even for crummy quality video, So then when I learned a bit about digital video, and cable’s 64 QAM 27mbps channels, I got excited and thought, “wow, they could deliver 1mbps service! And wouldn’t it be cool to have 1M home online at 10x the speed of ISDN?”. It was cool! And two more orders of magnitude later, here we are.
> > >
> > > — Jim
> > >
> > > On Nov 7, 2025, at 12:52 PM, J Pan <Pan@uvic.ca> wrote:
> > >
> > > latency is based on round-trip time, and one-way delay includes
> > > transmission delay, propagation delay, queuing delay and processing
> > > delay. bandwidth does affect transmission delay (or serialization
> > > delay), propagation delay is determined by the link length and the
> > > "travel" speed of the signal, queuing delay is the hardest part and
> > > affected by the buffer bloat a lot, and processing delay is another
> > > variable. of course, transmission delay takes less and less portion of
> > > the end-to-end delay now due to higher and higher "speed" links
> > >
> > > consumers may mistaken the speed of the link (the "width" of their
> > > pipe) as how fast their internet is (the "length" of the pipe), due to
> > > the poor terminology we have been using ;-)
> > >
> > >
> > _______________________________________________
> > LibreQoS mailing list -- libreqos@lists.bufferbloat.net
> > To unsubscribe send an email to libreqos-leave@lists.bufferbloat.net
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] Re: Re: Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-11-08 17:03 ` J Pan
@ 2025-11-08 18:11 ` Sebastian Moeller
2025-11-10 3:48 ` Jim Forster
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: Sebastian Moeller @ 2025-11-08 18:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: J Pan
Cc: dan, Jim Forster, Frantisek Borsik, Cake List, bloat, codel,
libreqos, l4s-discuss, starlink
Hi J,
> On 8. Nov 2025, at 18:03, J Pan via Starlink <starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
>
> yes, availability (at least two competing network providers with
> reliable services),
As David already mentioned that gets us a duopoly, but going mildly higher still results in an oligopoly... As a market realist (that is someone who accepts efficient market when he sees them, but does not naive believe in the fairy tales of the invisible hand of the market) I think that we would be often much better off with a competently managed/regulated monopoly than with duo- to oligopolies that are treated as if they were efficient markets... Infrastructure (and at least access networks are at least infrastructure-ish IMHO) is not something where the free market typically excels at.
> affordability (so the competition to bring the
> price and cost down)
I agree, but that is really at odds with your first point, to get that from a market we clearly need to grow the supply side to get out of oligopoly territory, and I am not sure that that is actually feasible.
> and applicability to modern internet applications
> (video streaming, conferencing and gaming in addition to email and web
> browsing) shall be the user-centric metrics in addition to throughput,
> latency/jitter, packet loss, etc
I am 100% behind this. I will mention though that I believe that latency increase under load is a decent proxy for the utility of a given access link for the usability with interactive applications.
Regards
Sebastian
> --
> J Pan, UVic CSc, ECS566, 250-472-5796 (NO VM), Pan@UVic.CA, Web.UVic.CA/~pan
>
> On Sat, Nov 8, 2025 at 8:00 AM dan <dandenson@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> I'm starting to see the signs that raw bandwidth is starting to lose
>> it's dominance for marketing. It's still the clear #1 ask but price
>> is rapidly overtaking speed for our customer requests.
>>
>> I believe we've hit this era's threshold on throughput needs and
>> people have started to notice that 'more' doesn't feel like a faster
>> service.
>>
>> one common scenario that we are using to win customers, in combination
>> with facebook testimonials, is that people have bad experiences with
>> wifi and they order a faster service from cable/fiber company and the
>> wifi just gets worse. This scenario I think is incredibly common and
>> seems to be a catalyst for 'speed isn't everything'. We come in with
>> 50-500Mbps of service and solid whole-home wifi and they are
>> converted.
>>
>> I hope we're not to far off from having 'speed' be just a feature, not
>> the entire story.
>>
>> and yes, we QoE or service with cake via libreqos which is the
>> difference between great service and inadequate service IMO.
>>
>> On Fri, Nov 7, 2025 at 12:50 PM J Pan via LibreQoS
>> <libreqos@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
>>>
>>> marketing is even worse. some claim 200mbps because 150mbps down and
>>> 50mbps up at peak data rate. of course, this is not the only problem
>>> in telecom, but likely the worst
>>>
>>> nevertheless, there are stats such as 10% inflation for food and 20%
>>> for gas, so in total 30% ;-) at this rate, any numbers can be floating
>>> around but none are telling the truth ;-)
>>> --
>>> J Pan, UVic CSc, ECS566, 250-472-5796 (NO VM), Pan@UVic.CA, Web.UVic.CA/~pan
>>>
>>> On Fri, Nov 7, 2025 at 10:55 AM Jim Forster <jim@connectivitycap.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Exactly so.
>>>>
>>>> Consumer expectations and service provider marketing may be influenced by memories of experience when transmission delay did matter. At one time I was very happy with my home ISDN connection, and even shared it with my neighbor. At about 128kbs, it was three orders of magnitude slower than my home fiber link. I’ve not run the numbers but I’m pretty sure transimission speed mattered for video, even for crummy quality video, So then when I learned a bit about digital video, and cable’s 64 QAM 27mbps channels, I got excited and thought, “wow, they could deliver 1mbps service! And wouldn’t it be cool to have 1M home online at 10x the speed of ISDN?”. It was cool! And two more orders of magnitude later, here we are.
>>>>
>>>> — Jim
>>>>
>>>> On Nov 7, 2025, at 12:52 PM, J Pan <Pan@uvic.ca> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> latency is based on round-trip time, and one-way delay includes
>>>> transmission delay, propagation delay, queuing delay and processing
>>>> delay. bandwidth does affect transmission delay (or serialization
>>>> delay), propagation delay is determined by the link length and the
>>>> "travel" speed of the signal, queuing delay is the hardest part and
>>>> affected by the buffer bloat a lot, and processing delay is another
>>>> variable. of course, transmission delay takes less and less portion of
>>>> the end-to-end delay now due to higher and higher "speed" links
>>>>
>>>> consumers may mistaken the speed of the link (the "width" of their
>>>> pipe) as how fast their internet is (the "length" of the pipe), due to
>>>> the poor terminology we have been using ;-)
>>>>
>>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> LibreQoS mailing list -- libreqos@lists.bufferbloat.net
>>> To unsubscribe send an email to libreqos-leave@lists.bufferbloat.net
> _______________________________________________
> Starlink mailing list -- starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net
> To unsubscribe send an email to starlink-leave@lists.bufferbloat.net
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] Re: Re: Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-11-08 18:11 ` [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] " Sebastian Moeller
@ 2025-11-10 3:48 ` Jim Forster
2025-11-10 6:27 ` Sebastian Moeller
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: Jim Forster @ 2025-11-10 3:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Sebastian Moeller
Cc: J Pan, dan, Frantisek Borsik, Cake List, bloat, codel, libreqos,
l4s-discuss, starlink
> On Nov 8, 2025, at 1:11 PM, Sebastian Moeller <moeller0@gmx.de> wrote:
>
> As a market realist (that is someone who accepts efficient market when he sees them, but does not naive believe in the fairy tales of the invisible hand of the market) I think that we would be often much better off with a competently managed/regulated monopoly than with duo- to oligopolies that are treated as if they were efficient markets... Infrastructure (and at least access networks are at least infrastructure-ish IMHO) is not something where the free market typically excels at.
Yeah, I also don’t think there’s an efficient, fair, market here that gets us what we w. In some ways, the Digital Divide is an expected outcome of capital allocation decisions by deregulated companies in a sector that has economies of scale and network effects.
At the same time, a "competently managed/regulated monopoly” may be as uncommon as Homo Economicus sitings are. Which example can you cite? NZ? UK? SE? And have they transitioned smoothly to new technology that would diminish the value of their existing infrastructure?
I recall that in the US prior to the .com boom, the telco’s idea of broadband was ISDN or maybe DSL or SMDS. They wrote many papers, had lots of trials, but did not aggressively do broadband, 'Everyone knew’ that the cablecos’ HFC would never work, and that they could not do digital and certainly not voice, HFC worked, and DOCSIS was a big success. That pressured the telcos to start actually deploying DSL, but it was too late, and the cablecos have dominated US broadband for a couple of decades.
Jim
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] Re: Re: Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-11-10 3:48 ` Jim Forster
@ 2025-11-10 6:27 ` Sebastian Moeller
2025-11-10 15:39 ` Jim Forster
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: Sebastian Moeller @ 2025-11-10 6:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Jim Forster
Cc: J Pan, dan, Frantisek Borsik, Cake List, bloat, codel, libreqos,
l4s-discuss, starlink
On 10 November 2025 05:48:38 CET, Jim Forster <jim@connectivitycap.com> wrote:
>> On Nov 8, 2025, at 1:11 PM, Sebastian Moeller <moeller0@gmx.de> wrote:
>>
>> As a market realist (that is someone who accepts efficient market when he sees them, but does not naive believe in the fairy tales of the invisible hand of the market) I think that we would be often much better off with a competently managed/regulated monopoly than with duo- to oligopolies that are treated as if they were efficient markets... Infrastructure (and at least access networks are at least infrastructure-ish IMHO) is not something where the free market typically excels at.
>
>
>Yeah, I also don’t think there’s an efficient, fair, market here that gets us what we w. In some ways, the Digital Divide is an expected outcome of capital allocation decisions by deregulated companies in a sector that has economies of scale and network effects.
Indeed... I just note that the POTS network was much more comprehensive in its reach due to stricter regulation...
>
>At the same time, a "competently managed/regulated monopoly” may be as uncommon as Homo Economicus sitings are.
Na, only if we put our aim for competence too high ;) . Over here electricity, water and street "networks" are dece
ntly regulated infrastructure.
>Which example can you cite? NZ? UK? SE? And have they transitioned smoothly to new technology that would diminish the value of their existing infrastructure?
Tricky... for infrastructure in general I believe there are loads of examples in Europe, for internet access networks it gets a bit trickier, but there are some examples of combining a single network with operator competition. (And that is my preferred model, monopoly network with regulated and fair access for operators, and then have as many operators as possibke offer their services over that network). But partial examples exist, e.g. the fiber network built in Amsterdam, or the point to point fiber network in switzerland where the incumbent built most of the ftth network and is regulated to physically unbundle individual lines to end customers, resultung in surprising competition of ISPs operating different technology over the same fibers (swisscom uses xgspon, salt.ch uses their own xgspin OLTs, init7 uses AON up to 25 Gbps). Sweden also seems to have a decent (albeit not regulated) separation between network operators and ISPs that offer services over these networks.
>
>I recall that in the US prior to the .com boom, the telco’s idea of broadband was ISDN or maybe DSL or SMDS. They wrote many papers, had lots of trials, but did not aggressively do broadband,
Yes, I agree that the old model of a vertically integrated full service telco breed complacency and was not ideal either (even though the POTS network had better reach than the HFC networks).
: 'Everyone knew’ that the cablecos’ HFC would never work, and that they could not do digital and certainly not voice, HFC worked, and DOCSIS was a big success. That pressured the telcos to start actually deploying DSL, but it was too late, and the cablecos have dominated US broadband for a couple of decades.
The outcome in Germany was different... hfc networks only ever reached around 75% of households and never exceeded 10 of estimated 45 million access sites for broadband services, while DSL still serves almost 23 million (and reaches almost all 45 million).But yes on the technology side it likely was hfc's pressure that sped up dsl development.
Now, the german market is a bit odd, as customers are neither terribly hungry for high capacity nor terribly price sensitive (the old ex-monopoly telco still serves most dsl customers in spite of being more expensive due to valid regulatory interventions).
Regards
Sebastian
P.S.: I understand that in this question there are of course multiple equally valid and justifyable positions one could take, this just happens to be mine. A couple of friendly ISPs for example reject this idea as they consider access networks to be a field where ISPs can differentiate and compete (some of them however proposed a regulated middle mile to be able to economically reach IXs and peering points to even the playing field).
>
>Jim
>
>
>>
>
--
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] Re: Re: Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-11-10 6:27 ` Sebastian Moeller
@ 2025-11-10 15:39 ` Jim Forster
2025-11-10 20:06 ` Frantisek Borsik
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: Jim Forster @ 2025-11-10 15:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Sebastian Moeller
Cc: J Pan, dan, Frantisek Borsik, Cake List, bloat, codel, libreqos,
l4s-discuss, starlink
Sebastian — thanks for all that. Again I find there is lots I don’t know, That’s a relief, otherwise life would be boring,
— Jim
> On Nov 9, 2025, at 10:27 PM, Sebastian Moeller <moeller0@gmx.de> wrote:
>
>
>
> On 10 November 2025 05:48:38 CET, Jim Forster <jim@connectivitycap.com <mailto:jim@connectivitycap.com>> wrote:
>>> On Nov 8, 2025, at 1:11 PM, Sebastian Moeller <moeller0@gmx.de> wrote:
>>>
>>> As a market realist (that is someone who accepts efficient market when he sees them, but does not naive believe in the fairy tales of the invisible hand of the market) I think that we would be often much better off with a competently managed/regulated monopoly than with duo- to oligopolies that are treated as if they were efficient markets... Infrastructure (and at least access networks are at least infrastructure-ish IMHO) is not something where the free market typically excels at.
>>
>>
>> Yeah, I also don’t think there’s an efficient, fair, market here that gets us what we w. In some ways, the Digital Divide is an expected outcome of capital allocation decisions by deregulated companies in a sector that has economies of scale and network effects.
>
> Indeed... I just note that the POTS network was much more comprehensive in its reach due to stricter regulation...
>
>>
>> At the same time, a "competently managed/regulated monopoly” may be as uncommon as Homo Economicus sitings are.
>
> Na, only if we put our aim for competence too high ;) . Over here electricity, water and street "networks" are dece
> ntly regulated infrastructure.
>
>> Which example can you cite? NZ? UK? SE? And have they transitioned smoothly to new technology that would diminish the value of their existing infrastructure?
>
> Tricky... for infrastructure in general I believe there are loads of examples in Europe, for internet access networks it gets a bit trickier, but there are some examples of combining a single network with operator competition. (And that is my preferred model, monopoly network with regulated and fair access for operators, and then have as many operators as possibke offer their services over that network). But partial examples exist, e.g. the fiber network built in Amsterdam, or the point to point fiber network in switzerland where the incumbent built most of the ftth network and is regulated to physically unbundle individual lines to end customers, resultung in surprising competition of ISPs operating different technology over the same fibers (swisscom uses xgspon, salt.ch <http://salt.ch/> uses their own xgspin OLTs, init7 uses AON up to 25 Gbps). Sweden also seems to have a decent (albeit not regulated) separation between network operators and ISPs that offer services over these networks.
>
>
>>
>> I recall that in the US prior to the .com boom, the telco’s idea of broadband was ISDN or maybe DSL or SMDS. They wrote many papers, had lots of trials, but did not aggressively do broadband,
>
> Yes, I agree that the old model of a vertically integrated full service telco breed complacency and was not ideal either (even though the POTS network had better reach than the HFC networks).
>
> : 'Everyone knew’ that the cablecos’ HFC would never work, and that they could not do digital and certainly not voice, HFC worked, and DOCSIS was a big success. That pressured the telcos to start actually deploying DSL, but it was too late, and the cablecos have dominated US broadband for a couple of decades.
>
> The outcome in Germany was different... hfc networks only ever reached around 75% of households and never exceeded 10 of estimated 45 million access sites for broadband services, while DSL still serves almost 23 million (and reaches almost all 45 million).But yes on the technology side it likely was hfc's pressure that sped up dsl development.
> Now, the german market is a bit odd, as customers are neither terribly hungry for high capacity nor terribly price sensitive (the old ex-monopoly telco still serves most dsl customers in spite of being more expensive due to valid regulatory interventions).
>
> Regards
> Sebastian
>
> P.S.: I understand that in this question there are of course multiple equally valid and justifyable positions one could take, this just happens to be mine. A couple of friendly ISPs for example reject this idea as they consider access networks to be a field where ISPs can differentiate and compete (some of them however proposed a regulated middle mile to be able to economically reach IXs and peering points to even the playing field).
>
>>
>> Jim
>>
>>
>>>
>>
>
> --
> Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] Re: Re: Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16)
2025-11-10 15:39 ` Jim Forster
@ 2025-11-10 20:06 ` Frantisek Borsik
0 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread
From: Frantisek Borsik @ 2025-11-10 20:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Jim Forster
Cc: Sebastian Moeller, J Pan, dan, Cake List, bloat, codel, libreqos,
l4s-discuss, starlink
Some post-gigabit era data from IETF 124 Montreal, shared by Jason:
"Further on my "we are in the post-gigabit era" theme from the IETF-124
meeting. Max 825 user devices, with peak simultaneous of 227 devices.
Bandwidth usage: avg downstream 241 Mbps and peak 1.18 Gbps, avg upstream
21 Mbps and peak 468 Mbps. If you are on an Xfinity Internet mid-split
spectrum area, your home connection could have handled all of that."
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/jlivingood_bandwidth-postgigabitera-latency-activity-7393719438384136192-IJaP
All the best,
Frank
Frantisek (Frank) Borsik
*In loving memory of Dave Täht: *1965-2025
https://libreqos.io/2025/04/01/in-loving-memory-of-dave/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/frantisekborsik
Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp: +421919416714
iMessage, mobile: +420775230885
Skype: casioa5302ca
frantisek.borsik@gmail.com
On Mon, Nov 10, 2025 at 4:39 PM Jim Forster <jim@connectivitycap.com> wrote:
> Sebastian — thanks for all that. Again I find there is lots I don’t know,
> That’s a relief, otherwise life would be boring,
>
> — Jim
>
> On Nov 9, 2025, at 10:27 PM, Sebastian Moeller <moeller0@gmx.de> wrote:
>
>
>
> On 10 November 2025 05:48:38 CET, Jim Forster <jim@connectivitycap.com>
> wrote:
>
> On Nov 8, 2025, at 1:11 PM, Sebastian Moeller <moeller0@gmx.de> wrote:
>
> As a market realist (that is someone who accepts efficient market when he
> sees them, but does not naive believe in the fairy tales of the invisible
> hand of the market) I think that we would be often much better off with a
> competently managed/regulated monopoly than with duo- to oligopolies that
> are treated as if they were efficient markets... Infrastructure (and at
> least access networks are at least infrastructure-ish IMHO) is not
> something where the free market typically excels at.
>
>
>
> Yeah, I also don’t think there’s an efficient, fair, market here that gets
> us what we w. In some ways, the Digital Divide is an expected outcome of
> capital allocation decisions by deregulated companies in a sector that has
> economies of scale and network effects.
>
>
> Indeed... I just note that the POTS network was much more comprehensive in
> its reach due to stricter regulation...
>
>
> At the same time, a "competently managed/regulated monopoly” may be as
> uncommon as Homo Economicus sitings are.
>
>
> Na, only if we put our aim for competence too high ;) . Over here
> electricity, water and street "networks" are dece
> ntly regulated infrastructure.
>
> Which example can you cite? NZ? UK? SE? And have they transitioned
> smoothly to new technology that would diminish the value of their existing
> infrastructure?
>
>
> Tricky... for infrastructure in general I believe there are loads of
> examples in Europe, for internet access networks it gets a bit trickier,
> but there are some examples of combining a single network with operator
> competition. (And that is my preferred model, monopoly network with
> regulated and fair access for operators, and then have as many operators as
> possibke offer their services over that network). But partial examples
> exist, e.g. the fiber network built in Amsterdam, or the point to point
> fiber network in switzerland where the incumbent built most of the ftth
> network and is regulated to physically unbundle individual lines to end
> customers, resultung in surprising competition of ISPs operating different
> technology over the same fibers (swisscom uses xgspon, salt.ch uses their
> own xgspin OLTs, init7 uses AON up to 25 Gbps). Sweden also seems to have a
> decent (albeit not regulated) separation between network operators and ISPs
> that offer services over these networks.
>
>
>
> I recall that in the US prior to the .com boom, the telco’s idea of
> broadband was ISDN or maybe DSL or SMDS. They wrote many papers, had lots
> of trials, but did not aggressively do broadband,
>
>
> Yes, I agree that the old model of a vertically integrated full service
> telco breed complacency and was not ideal either (even though the POTS
> network had better reach than the HFC networks).
>
> : 'Everyone knew’ that the cablecos’ HFC would never work, and that they
> could not do digital and certainly not voice, HFC worked, and DOCSIS was a
> big success. That pressured the telcos to start actually deploying DSL, but
> it was too late, and the cablecos have dominated US broadband for a couple
> of decades.
>
> The outcome in Germany was different... hfc networks only ever reached
> around 75% of households and never exceeded 10 of estimated 45 million
> access sites for broadband services, while DSL still serves almost 23
> million (and reaches almost all 45 million).But yes on the technology side
> it likely was hfc's pressure that sped up dsl development.
> Now, the german market is a bit odd, as customers are neither terribly
> hungry for high capacity nor terribly price sensitive (the old ex-monopoly
> telco still serves most dsl customers in spite of being more expensive due
> to valid regulatory interventions).
>
> Regards
> Sebastian
>
> P.S.: I understand that in this question there are of course multiple
> equally valid and justifyable positions one could take, this just happens
> to be mine. A couple of friendly ISPs for example reject this idea as they
> consider access networks to be a field where ISPs can differentiate and
> compete (some of them however proposed a regulated middle mile to be able
> to economically reach IXs and peering points to even the playing field).
>
>
> Jim
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
>
>
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2025-11-10 20:03 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 16+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2025-09-30 20:24 [Bloat] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: [Starlink] Keynote: QoE/QoS - Bandwidth Is A Lie! at WISPAPALOOZA 2025 (October 16) James Forster
2025-09-30 20:48 ` Frantisek Borsik
2025-10-01 19:24 ` dan
2025-10-01 21:32 ` Frantisek Borsik
2025-11-07 10:53 ` Frantisek Borsik
2025-11-07 16:19 ` [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] " Jim Forster
2025-11-07 17:52 ` [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] " J Pan
2025-11-07 18:55 ` [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] " Jim Forster
2025-11-07 19:50 ` J Pan
2025-11-08 16:00 ` [Bloat] Re: [LibreQoS] Re: [Starlink] " dan
2025-11-08 17:03 ` J Pan
2025-11-08 18:11 ` [Bloat] Re: [Starlink] [LibreQoS] " Sebastian Moeller
2025-11-10 3:48 ` Jim Forster
2025-11-10 6:27 ` Sebastian Moeller
2025-11-10 15:39 ` Jim Forster
2025-11-10 20:06 ` Frantisek Borsik
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