Hi Michael, This blog post describes how the test steers to the server(s). Noted on the other thread, I hope to add the url param option reasonably soon. SERGEY FEDOROV Director of Engineering sfedorov@netflix.com 121 Albright Way | Los Gatos, CA 95032 On Fri, May 1, 2020 at 3:07 PM Michael Richardson wrote: > > {Do I need all the lists?} > > Sergey Fedorov via Bloat wrote: > > Just a note that I have a plan to separate the loaded latency into > > upload/download. It's not great UX now they way it's implemented. > > The timeline view is a bit more nuanced, in the spirit of the > simplistic > > UX, but I've been thinking on a good way to show that for super > users as > > well. > > Two latency numbers - that's more user friendly, we want the general > user > > to understand the meaning. And latency under load is much easier than > > bufferbloat. > > > As a side note, if our backend is decent, I'm curious what are the > backends > > for the speed tests that exist that are great :) > > Does it find/use my nearest Netflix cache? > > As others asked, it would be great if we could put the settings into a URL, > and having the "latency under upload" is probably the most important number > that people trying to videoconference need to know. > > (it's also the thing that they can mostly directly/cheaply fix) > > > SERGEY FEDOROV > > Director of Engineering > > sfedorov@netflix.com > > 121 Albright Way | Los Gatos, CA 95032 > > Very happy that you are looped in here. > > -- > ] Never tell me the odds! | ipv6 mesh > networks [ > ] Michael Richardson, Sandelman Software Works | IoT > architect [ > ] mcr@sandelman.ca http://www.sandelman.ca/ | ruby on > rails [ > >