There are a lot of "Cisco Powered" networks doing QoS, but more for
multi-service type stuff for voice and video.

If you look on Cisco's web-site, there's a whole program your ISP can join
to become "Cisco-powered" in multiservice, although I don't know the exact
search terms you'd need to find it.  If you want to join, Cisco will tell
you in technical detail what you need to do for QoS.  I imagine it's just
stuff under the MQC, but I never bothered to ask.

In any case, I don't think giving lowly http priority is the best business
decision you can make.  It's TCP based so it can handle delay, plus you have
no control of the http traffic once the user leaves your network onto
another, so all the time and effort you place into it, may be all for
naught.  Even if you give http A+ traffic rating, as soon as the user goes
to another network peer, it may be congested.

Just my .02 cents


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RFC 1149 Compliant






""Jay Greenberg""  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I am considering deploying QoS features in our ISP.   The ISP has about
> 60 thousand users in total, and I was thinking of setting a general
> traffic policy.    E.g., I would like to set HTTP traffic down to a very
> low delay, to make the network seem faster to end users.   I suppose
> what I am asking is - has anyone done this for an ISP, and if so, how
> did it turn out?
>
>
> Jay Greenberg




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