I don’t know. But this is why we run Saisei and carve out “channels” for 
applications. 

We’ve found issues with that exact situation and devices that don’t handle the 
down scale properly. 

We’ve actually had customers report a better experience on our 10 meg plan than 
our 25 megabit plan until we established data lanes on our plans. 

Now you buy a 25 meg plan but streaming, updates, gaming, voip, etc all have 
their own lanes. 

You can use everything unless something else wants data. Then everything gets 
dumped into the lanes and stays there. 

Some say this is shady I liken this to a freeway at rush hour. 

You leave all the traffic just go and it backlogs. You have the HOV lane and 
now traffic is flying again. 

Customers want their experience to just work. 

> On Dec 5, 2020, at 4:39 PM, Ken Hohhof <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> I have seen customers recently using 12 Mbps for what appears to be a single 
> Netflix video stream.  Anyone else seeing this?
>  
> I was puzzled what could be between HD at 5-6 Mbps and UHD at 15-25 Mbps?  
> But then I saw this:
>  
> https://netflixtechblog.com/optimized-shot-based-encodes-for-4k-now-streaming-47b516b10bbb
>  
> Are these customers streaming 4K video?  And if so, does anyone know what 
> happens if other people in the house start using bandwidth, will Netflix 
> gracefully adjust the video quality downward to lower quality UHD or to HD?  
> Or will customers start watching 4K UHD and then complain their Internet 
> sucks if other usage in the house drops the available download bandwidth to 8 
> or 10 Mbps?
>  
> And I wonder how this interacts with Netflix supposedly limiting stream rates 
> during the pandemic to lessen the burden on Internet infrastructure.
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