What is DSRC? DSRC (Dedicated Short-Range Communications) is a wireless communication technology that enables vehicles to communicate with each other and other road users directly, without involving cellular or other infrastructure. DSRC is based on WiFi technology ⁣https://auto-talks.com/technology/dsrc-technology/#:~:text=What%20is%20DSRC%3F,involving%20cellular%20or%20other%20infrastructure. On Mar 9, 2024, 12:42 PM, at 12:42 PM, Dick Roy via Nnagain wrote: > > > > >…> > > > >As expected this technique is designed to allow exactly what NN was >designed >to prohibit (treating packets differentially in the internet based on >economic considerations*)... this is IMHO why instead of calling a >spade a >spade mobile carriers avoid describing this in a useful way, as it is >exactly about prioritisation... IMHO that will back fire, and a better >avenue would be to be open about what it enables and propose a method >to >restrict the potential issues. E.g. (I am making this up on the fly, so >it >will likely not hold up to any degree of scrutiny) by self limiting to >never >commit more than X% of a cell's capacity to slicing, IFF the cell is >used >for normal end user service at all. So admit that there is some >trade-off >here, limit the fall-out, and then describe why we as a society should >embrace that trade-off. I am a bit sceptical about the whole car 2 car >communication thing (that is cars talk to cars, not people n cars talk >to >people on cars ;) ), but if a Carrier believes there is value in that >for >e.g. accident avoidance, then tell how this requires the stricter >network >guarantees that (only?) slicing can deliver. > >[RR] V2X communications for saving lives will NEVER go through ANY >carrier’s >network in spite of what you hear. There is simply no way anyone is >going >to pay to have BSMs broadcast 10 times a second to prevent accidents, >and NO >CARRIER is going to give that capacity away for free, even if they had >enough to carry the traffic, which they do not by many orders of >magnitude!!! More importantly, the information being exchanged does >NOT >require a network to get where it needs to go! The 5G hype you hear >from >various carriers and equipment suppliers related to V2X communications >is >all powerpoint BS (to make shareholders happy). And there is a ton of >it out >there! :-):-) > > > >RR > > > >------------------------------------------------------------------------ > >_______________________________________________ >Nnagain mailing list >Nnagain@lists.bufferbloat.net >https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/nnagain