Thanks for the heads up.
Downstream throughput and upstream throughput are measured in indepdent
tests, they aren't mixed as the question suggests might be the case. So,
latency under downstream load is measured independently from latency under
upstream load. The raw data for both is published for
Sam, see the question below about your methodology, from your FCC report.
Thanks,
--MM--
Evil is defined by mortals who think they know "The Truth" and use force to
apply it to others.
---
Matt Mathis (Email is best)
Home & mobile: 412-654-7529 please leave
22 10:38, Fries, Justus via Bloat wrote:
No, we do not have that data aggregated.
From: Dave Taht <mailto:dave.t...@gmail.com>
Sent: 20 June 2022 16:19:22
To: Fries, Justus
Cc: bloat; Rpm; Sam Crawford
Subject: Re: [Bloat] [Rpm] An 8 years perspective on broad
No, we do not have that data aggregated.
From: Dave Taht
Sent: 20 June 2022 16:19:22
To: Fries, Justus
Cc: bloat; Rpm; Sam Crawford
Subject: Re: [Bloat] [Rpm] An 8 years perspective on broadband in the usa - fcc
data
I would characterize a goodly percentage of
I would characterize a goodly percentage of the bufferbloat.net members'
outputs as a war between creators and consumers, as a fight to keep
networks usable during uploads. Do you have the upload latencies over time
somewhere?
On Mon, Jun 20, 2022, 5:37 AM Justus via Bloat
wrote:
> We are using
We are using the latency under downstream load data for the paper.
Regards
Justus
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Matt, Sam
thank you very much. Great list!
Regards
Sebastian
> On Jun 19, 2022, at 21:51, Sam Crawford wrote:
>
> Thanks for the heads up.
>
> Downstream throughput and upstream throughput are measured in indepdent
> tests, they aren't mixed as the question suggests might be the cas