> On Jun 19, 2018, at 10:35 PM, Jonathan Morton <[email protected]> wrote: > >> On 19 Jun, 2018, at 11:14 pm, Pete Heist <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> I don’t think we can do much better than “it makes your Internet faster”, >> which is what most people want > > s/faster/reliable/ > > It would be really nice to be able to say "go out and buy this box, plug it > in and run through the setup wizard" instead of "go through the frankly scary > process of reflashing your router with OpenWRT". In that case we might > really get some traction.
There could be a transparent bridge available with Cake installed that just has a web interface for a few basic settings, but it would only help people with WiFi APs or switches / networks separate from their router. Probably not most people. My secret hope is we’re heading into an era when people will want to own their data once again and move it out of the cloud and back into their residences. Small, Linux-based home devices will be so cheap, powerful and reliable that they’ll route, store, serve, control, be an AP, plus allow the installation of unprivileged containers or apps with various distributed functionalities. Just like some join cooperative ISPs, people will join a cooperative to pay for the engineering, development and support of these devices, because they’ll realize that it’s the right thing to do instead of selling themselves for “free” services that perpetuate monopolies. Seems like a long way about it, but surely then we can fund and install Cake on these devices. :) If it wouldn’t be everyone, maybe it would be for some? for enough? pipe dream? _______________________________________________ Cake mailing list [email protected] https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/cake
