[Starlink] On metrics
rjmcmahon
rjmcmahon at rjmcmahon.com
Sun Mar 19 17:00:35 EDT 2023
Hi All,
It seems getting the metrics right is critical. Our industry can't be
reporting things that mislead or misassign blame. The medical community
doesn't treat people for cancer without having a high degree they've
gotten the diagnostics correct as an example.
An initial metric, per this group, would be geared towards
responsiveness or the speed of causality. Here, we may need to include
linear distance, the power required to achieve a responsiveness and to
take account of Pareto efficiencies, where one device's better
responsiveness can't make another's worse.
An example per a possible FiWi new & comprehensive metric: A rating
could be something like 10K responses per second at 1Km terrestrial
(fiber) cable / 6m radius free space range / 5W total / 0-impact to
others. If consumers can learn to read nutrition labels they can also
learn to read these.
Maybe a device produces a scan code qr based upon its e3e measurement
and the scan code qr loads a page with human interpretable analysis?
Similar to how we now pull up menus on our mobile phones listing the
food items and the nutrition information that's available to seat at a
table. Then, in a perfect world, there is a rating per each link hop or
better, network jurisdiction. Each jurisdiction could decide if they
want to participate or not, similar to connecting up an autonomous
system or not. I think measurements of network jurisdictions without
prior agreements are unfair. The lack of measurement capability is
likely enough pressure needed to motivate actions.
Bob
PS. As a side note, and a shameless plug, iperf 2 now supports
bounceback and a big issue has been clock sync for one way delays (OWD.)
Per a comment from Jean Tourrhiles
https://sourceforge.net/p/iperf2/tickets/242/ I added some unsync
detections in the bounceback measurements. Contact me directly if your
engineering team needs more information on iperf 2.
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