Here's me wearing my business executive/business consulting hat:
 
If you want a market that fits Cake very well, SME corporate routers and 
building-scale routers are perfect. Whereever there's a bottleneck behind which 
you have many PCs and consumer devices, etc. Cake can do the job. (That's 
better than the bulk of the low end home routers, which still are installed in 
apartments with one family as the only traffic source, so just buying a faster 
link typically manages the bottleneck OK today).
 
Let's say you are a startup in the Bay Area - you get a Comcast Business 
service connection, and then start hiring people with laptops. And maybe you 
have some "lights out" server capacity at some colo you pay for, but you don't 
buy the highest speed service for your server traffic to get to your 
developers' machines (either in the office or remote).

Seems to me that Cake is the answer, and that answer will run in mini-PCs 
(heftier CPUs than today's home routers) that have 2 NICs, each that are GigE 
or 2.5 GigE or 40 GigE, depending on your bottleneck bandwidth of the service 
you can buy from Comcast Business or your colo facility.
 
Cake will "just solve" the problem of congestion at that bottleneck, by pushing 
back traffic rates fairly to the endpoints on a flow by flow basis.
 
Now lots of small businesses run something like pFSense at that bottleneck 
point on that hardware.
Others seem to even run something more complex like Proxmox (because it costs 
next to nothing) with one of the VMs being the "router".
 
I'm sure there are lots of small IT support shops that install and maintain 
these appliances out there. I don't know any personally, but it's crazy for a 
small business to have a full time employee maintain that interconnect.
 
So, given that Cake would make them more money, they must be convincable to 
share some of that with Cake developers. Because they have deep pockets, 
Comcast Business (which is a VERY different business from Comcast residential 
Internet) would be the first place I'd look. Presumably they dela with Value 
Added Resellers who specialize in provisioning small and medium businesses.
 
(I once had a nice conversation with Jason Livingood about how Comcast Business 
is independent and should be thought of as having very different tech needs. He 
might be able to tell you who at Comcast Business might be a good contact. The 
same with all the other business Internet access providers out there.)
 
On Saturday, July 29, 2023 4:49pm, "Dave Taht via Cake" 
<cake@lists.bufferbloat.net> said:



> thank you sebastian and dave for your comments and feedback so far. I
> would like to find other markets for cake, more statistics worth
> collecting, and other ideas, in the hope that we could find something
> fundable out of the mix.
> 
> On Fri, Jul 28, 2023 at 9:07 AM Dave Taht <dave.t...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > I don't know if it is possible to multithread cake or not. But I
> > started writing the ideas up here:
> >
> >
> https://docs.google.com/document/d/1tTYBPeaRdCO9AGTGQCpoiuLORQzN_bG3TAkEolJPh28/edit?usp=sharing
> >
> > Pretty fragmentary, other use cases, other features, other
> > mis-features, and thoughts requested.
> >
> > --
> > Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bxmoBr4cBKg
> > Dave Täht CSO, LibreQos
> 
> 
> 
> --
> Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bxmoBr4cBKg
> Dave Täht CSO, LibreQos
> _______________________________________________
> Cake mailing list
> Cake@lists.bufferbloat.net
> https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/cake
> 
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