[Starlink] It’s the Latency, FCC
Frantisek Borsik
frantisek.borsik at gmail.com
Thu May 2 15:50:10 EDT 2024
Thanks, Colin. This was just another great read on video (and audio - in
the past emails from you) bullet-proofing for the near future.
To be honest, the consensus on the bandwidth overall in the bufferbloat
related circles was in the 25/3 - 100/20 ballpark, but all what many of us
were trying to achieve while talking to FCC (et al) was to point out, that
in order to really make it bulletproof and usable for not only near future,
but for today, a reasonable Quality of Experience requirement is necessary
to be added to the definition of broadband. Here is the link to the FCC NOI
and related discussion:
https://circleid.com/posts/20231211-its-the-latency-fcc
Hopefully, we have managed to get that message over to the other side. At
least 2 of 5 FCC Commissioners seems to be getting it - Nathan Simington
and Brendan Carr - and Nathan event arranged for his staffers to talk with
Dave and others. Hope that this line of of cooperation will continue and we
will manage to help the rest of the FCC to understand the issues at hand
correctly.
All the best,
Frank
Frantisek (Frank) Borsik
https://www.linkedin.com/in/frantisekborsik
Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp: +421919416714
iMessage, mobile: +420775230885
Skype: casioa5302ca
frantisek.borsik at gmail.com
On Thu, May 2, 2024 at 4:47 PM Colin_Higbie via Starlink <
starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
> Alex, fortunately, we are not bound to use personal experiences and
> observations on this. We have real market data that can provide an
> objective, data-supported conclusion. No need for a
> chocolate-or-vanilla-ice-cream-tastes-better discussion on this.
>
> Yes, cameras can film at 8K (and higher in some cases). However, at those
> resolutions (with exceptions for ultra-high end cameras, such as those used
> by multi-million dollar telescopes), except under very specific conditions,
> the actual picture quality doesn't vary past about 5.5K. The loss of detail
> simply moves from a consequence of too few pixels to optical and focus
> limits of the lenses. Neighboring pixels simply hold a blurry image,
> meaning they don't actually carry any usable information. A still shot with
> 1/8 of a second exposure can easily benefit from an 8K or higher sensor.
> Video sometimes can under bright lights with a relatively still or slow
> moving scene. Neither of these requirements lends itself to typical home
> video at 30 (or 24) frames per second – that's 0.03s of time per frame. We
> can imagine AI getting to the point where it can compensate for lack of
> clarity, and this is already being used for game rendering (e.g., Nvidia's
> DLSS and Intel's XESS), but that requires training per scene in those games
> and there hasn't been much development work done on this for filming, at
> least not yet.
>
> Will sensors (or AI) improve to capture images faster per amount of
> incoming photons so that effective digital shutter speeds can get faster at
> lower light levels? No doubt. Will it materially change video quality so
> that 8K is a similar step up from 4K as 4K is from HD (or as HD was from
> SD)? No, at least not in the next several years. Read on for why.
>
> So far that was all on the production side. But what about the consumer
> side? Mass market TV sizes max out below about 100" (83" seems to be a
> fairly common large size, but some stores carry larger models). Even those
> large sizes that do reach mass-market locations and are available on
> Amazon, still comprise a very small % of total TV sales. The vast, vast
> majority of TV sales are of sub 70" models. This is not just because of
> pricing, that's a factor. It's also because home architecture had not
> considered screens this big. At these sizes, it's not just a matter of
> upgrading the entertainment console furniture, it's a matter of building a
> different room with a dedicated entertainment wall. There is a lot of
> inertia in the architecture and building that prevents this from being a
> sudden change, not to mention the hundreds of millions of existing homes
> that are already sized for TV's below 100".
>
> And important to this discussion, at several feet from even a 70" - 90"
> screen, most people can't see the difference between 4K and 8K anyway. The
> pixels are too small at that distance to make a difference in the User
> Experience. This is a contrast with 4K from HD, which many people (not all)
> can see, or from SD to HD, an improvement virtually everyone can see (to
> the point that news broadcasts now blur the faces of their anchors to
> remove wrinkles that weren't visible back in the SD days).
>
> For another real-world example of this curtailing resolution growth:
> smartphones raced to higher and higher resolutions, until they reached
> about 4K, then started pulling back. Some are slightly higher, but as often
> as not, even at the flagship level, many smartphones fall slightly below
> 4K, with the recognition that customers got wise to screens all being
> effectively perfect and higher resolutions no longer mattered.
>
> Currently, the leading contender for anything appearing at 8K are games,
> not streaming video. That's because games don't require camera lenses and
> light sensors that don't yet exist. They can render dimly lit, fast moving
> scenes in 8K just as easily as brightly lit scenes. BUT (huge but here),
> GPUs aren't powerful enough to do that yet either at good framerates, and
> for most gamers (not all, but a significant majority), framerate is more
> important resolution. Top of the line graphics cards (the ones that run
> about $1,000, so not mainstream yet) of the current generation are just
> hitting 120fps at 4K in top modern games. From a pixel moving perspective,
> that would translate to 30fps at 8K (4x the # of pixels, 120/4 = 30). 30fps
> is good enough for streaming video, but not good enough for a gamer over 4K
> at 120fps. Still, I anticipate (this part is just my opinion, not a fact)
> that graphics cards on high-end gaming PCs will be the first to drive 8K
> experiences for gamers before 8K streaming becomes an in-demand feature.
> Games have HUDs and are often played on monitors just a couple of feet from
> the gamer where ultra-fine details would be visible and relevant.
>
> Having said all of that, does this mean that I don't think 8K and higher
> will eventually replace 4K for mass market consumer streaming? No, I
> suspect that in the long-run you're right that they will. That's a
> reasonable conclusion based on history of screen and TV programming
> resolutions, but that timeframe is likely more than 10 years off and
> planning bandwidth requirements for the needs 10-years from now does not
> require any assumptions relating to standard video resolutions people will
> be watching then: we can all assume with reasonable confidence based on
> history of Internet bandwidth usage that bandwidth needs and desires will
> continue to increase over time.
>
> The point for this group is that you lose credibility to the audience if
> you base your reasoning on future video resolutions that the market is
> currently rejecting without at least acknowledging that those are projected
> future needs, rather than present day needs.
>
> At the same time, 4K is indeed a market standard TODAY. That's not an
> opinion, it's a data point and a fact. As I've said multiple times in this
> discussion, what makes this a fact and not an opinion are that millions of
> people choose to pay for access to 4K content and the television programs
> and movies that are stored and distributed in 4K. All the popular TV
> devices and gaming consoles support 4K HDR content in at least some
> versions of the product (they may also offer discounted versions that don't
> do HDR or only go to 1080p or 1440). The market has spoken and delivered us
> that data. 4K HDR is the standard for videophiles and popular enough that
> the top video streaming services all offer it. It is also not in a chaotic
> state, with suppliers providing different technologies until the market
> sorts out a winner (like the old Blu-ray vs. HD-DVD fight 15 years ago, or
> VHS vs. Beta before that). Yes, there are some variants on HDR (Dolby
> Vision vs. HDR-10), but as TV's are manufactured today, Dolby Vision is
> effectively just a superset of HDR-10, like G-Sync is a superset of
> Adaptive Sync for variable refresh rate displays needed for gaming. So,
> yes, 4K HDR is a standard, whether you buy a Blu-ray UHD movie at Walmart
> or Best Buy or stream your programming from Netflix, Disney+, Max, or
> Amazon Prime.
>
> So again, this is why the minimum rational top bandwidth any new ISP
> should be developing (at least in developed countries – I think it's fair
> to say that if people have no Internet access within hundreds of miles,
> even slow Internet for connectivity to a local library in travel distance
> from home is far better than nothing) is 25Mbps as the established
> bandwidth required by the 4K providers to stream 4K HDR content. This does
> not mean more would not be better or that more won't be needed in the
> future. But if you are endorsing ISP buildout focused around low-latency
> under load at anything LESS THAN 25Mbps, you have simply shifted the
> problem for customers and users of the new service from poor latency (this
> group's focus) to poor bandwidth incapable of providing modern services.
>
> To be taken seriously and maximize your chances at success at influencing
> policy, I urge this group's members to use that 25Mbps top bandwidth as a
> floor. And to clarify my meaning, I don't mean ISPs shouldn't also offer
> less expensive tiers of service with bandwidth at only, say, 3 or 10Mbps.
> Those are fine and will be plenty for many users, and a lower cost option
> with less capability is a good thing. What I mean is that if they are
> building out new service, the infrastructure needs to support and they need
> to OFFER a level of at least 25Mbps. Higher is fine too (better even), but
> where cost collides with technical capability, 25Mbps is the market
> requirement, below that and the service offering is failing to provide a
> fully functional Internet connection.
>
> Sorry for the long message, but I keep seeing a lot of these same
> subjective responses to objective data, which concern me. I hope this long
> version finally addresses all of those and I can now return to just reading
> the brilliant posts of the latency and TCP/IP experts who normally drive
> these discussions. You are all far more knowledgeable than I in those
> areas. My expertise is in what the market needs from its Internet
> connectivity and why.
>
> Cheers,
> Colin
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Starlink <starlink-bounces at lists.bufferbloat.net> On Behalf Of
> starlink-request at lists.bufferbloat.net
> Sent: Thursday, May 2, 2024 5:22 AM
> To: starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net
> Subject: Starlink Digest, Vol 38, Issue 13
>
> Today's Topics:
>
> 1. Re: It’s the Latency, FCC (Alexandre Petrescu)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Thu, 2 May 2024 11:21:44 +0200
> From: Alexandre Petrescu <alexandre.petrescu at gmail.com>
> To: starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net
> Subject: Re: [Starlink] It’s the Latency, FCC
> Message-ID: <94ba2b39-1fc8-46e2-9f77-3b04a63099e1 at gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
>
>
> Le 30/04/2024 à 22:05, Sebastian Moeller via Starlink a écrit :
> > Hi Colin,
> > [...]
> >
> >> A lot of responses like "but 8K is coming" (it's not, only
> >> experimental YouTube videos showcase these resolutions to the general
> >> public, no studio is making 8K content and no streaming service
> >> offers anything in 8K or higher)
> > [SM] Not my claim.
>
> Right, it is my claim. '8K is coming' comes from an observation that it
> is now present in consumer cameras with ability to film 8K, since a few
> years now.
>
> The SD-HD-4K-8K-16K consumer market tendency can be evaluated. One could
> parallel it with the megapixel number (photo camera) evolution, or with the
> micro-processor feature size. There might be levelling, but I am not sure
> it is at 4K.
>
> What I would be interested to look at is the next acronym that requires
> high bw low latency and that is not in the series SD-HD-4K-8K-16K. This
> series did not exist in the times of analog TV ('SD' appeared when digital
> TV 'HD' appeared), so probably a new series will appear that describes TV
> features.
>
> Alex
>
> >
> >> and "I don't need to watch 4K, 1080p is sufficient for me,
> > [SM] That however is my claim ;)
> >
> >> so it should be for everyone else too"
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