> On Jan 4, 2018, at 5:20 PM, Dave Taht <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Yes, SYN rate limiting is the default (and set very low) in nearly
> everything. That might be measurable. QUIC is now 7% of internet
> traffic.
>
> Done fixing the home. It's time to fix the rest of the internet. And
> that's not just queue theory but address assignment and routing.
> Here's
> a traceroute from where I sit in Nicaragua at the moment, post cake.
> How to figure out exactly how much NAT is on the path?
After the net neutrality rollback in the US (along with the ongoing cable
monopolies there), it occurred to me that there may be more interest in
cooperative ISPs. Frankly, I don’t know why it hasn’t happened sooner. But
having worked with one in Europe, I saw a patchwork of “good enough, kind of”
software that is stitched together to get the job done…stuff from Ubiquiti,
other vendors and various open source projects of different vintages. In this
case they did/do a great job with what’s available, but I think they'd be the
first to admit it could be better.
There may be a need for more modern, cross-device management software to serve
small to medium sized cooperative ISPs like this, and that there may be a
viable, long-term business model here. I picture a small server on each device
to be managed and a management server (serving a mobile-first, conversational
UI?). Queueing is an important part of this, if a small part of the work as a
whole, unfortunately. This wouldn’t be a small undertaking. I’m "just saying”
(and getting off the original topic as well, just what I read here made me
think of it)…
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