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</font></span></blockquote></div><div class="gmail_extra">7) transmission ate a metric ton of cpu (30% on a i3) at these speeds.</div><div class="gmail_extra">> </div><div class="gmail_extra">> 8) My (cable) link actually is 140mbit down, 11 up. I did not much</div><div class="gmail_extra">> care for asymmetric networks when the ratios were 6x1, so 13x1 is way</div><div class="gmail_extra">> up there....</div><div class="gmail_extra">> </div><div class="gmail_extra">> Anyway, 20% packet loss of the "right" packets was survivable. I will</div><div class="gmail_extra">> subject myself to the same test on other fq or aqms. And, if I can</div><div class="gmail_extra">> force myself to, with no aqm or fq. For SCIENCE!</div><div class="gmail_extra">> </div><div class="gmail_extra">> Attention, DMCA lawyers: Please send takedown notices to</div><div class="gmail_extra">> bufferbloat-research@/dev/<a href="http://null.org">null.org</a> . One of the things truly</div><div class="gmail_extra">> astonishing about this is that in 12 hours in one night I downloaded</div><div class="gmail_extra">> more stuff than I could ever watch (mp4) or listen to (even in flac</div><div class="gmail_extra">> format) in several days of dedicated consumption. And it all just got</div><div class="gmail_extra">> rm -rf'd. It occurs to me there is a human upper bound to how much</div><div class="gmail_extra">> data one would ever want to consume, and we cracked that limit at</div><div class="gmail_extra">> 20mbit, with only 4k+ video driving demand any harder. When we started</div><div class="gmail_extra">> <a href="http://bufferbloat.net">bufferbloat.net</a> 20mbit downlinks were the best you could easily get.</div><div class="gmail_extra"><br></div><div class="gmail_extra">Linux ISOs are a great way to saturate your download. I have enough downloaded that while seeding, I can sustain over 10Mb/s, but don't expect to saturate your upload since they're already heavily seeded, but less so since I stopped recently.</div></div></div>