[NNagain] FCC NOI due dec 1 on broadband speed standards
Jeremy Austin
jeremy at aterlo.com
Tue Nov 14 12:58:54 EST 2023
On Tue, Nov 14, 2023 at 6:46 AM Livingood, Jason via Nnagain <
nnagain at lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
> On the subject of how much bandwidth does one household need, here's a fun
> stat for you.
>
>
>
> At the IETF’s 118th meeting <https://www.ietf.org/how/meetings/118/> last
> week (Nov 4 – 10, 2023), there were over 1,000 engineers in attendance. At
> peak there were 870 devices connected to the WiFi network. Peak bandwidth
> usage:
>
> - Downstream peak ~750 Mbps
> - Upstream ~250 Mbps
>
>
How was this calculated? That's an unusually high ratio of up to down, so
my suspicion is that they aren't time correlated; they're also not /normal/
or /evening/ peaks, I'm expecting.
There's a big difference between individual peaks of upload and aggregate
peaks of upload; most people aren't streaming high symmetric bandwidth
simultaneously. Consequently a peak busy hour online load, I'm finding, is
still much more like 8:1 over all users (idle and active), in Preseem's
data set.
In addition to speed tests being, like democracy, the worst form of
government except for all the others that have been tried, it would be
instructive both for end users and ISPs to choose, agree on and understand
specific percentiles of expected performance at idle and at peak busy hour.
Has anyone solved the math problem of distinguishing (from outside) a
constraint in supply from a reduction in demand?
Jeremy
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