Quic gives the internet's data transmission foundation a needed speedup

It's been eight years since Google first announced the technology to replace 
the internet's seminal TCP standard.


Stephen Shankland  May 29, 2021 5:00 a.m.
https://www.cnet.com/news/quic-gives-the-internets-data-transmission-foundation-a-needed-speedup/


One of the internet's foundations just got an upgrade. Quic, a protocol for 
transmitting data between computers, improves speed and security on the 
internet and can replace Transmission Control Protocol, or TCP, a standard that 
dates back to Ye Olde Internet of 1974.

Earlier this week, the Internet Engineering Task Force, which sets many 
standards for the global network, published Quic as a standard. Web browsers 
and online services have been testing the technology for years, but the IETF's 
imprimatur is a sign the standard is mature enough to embrace fully.

It's extremely hard to improve the internet at the fundamental level of data 
transmission. Countless devices, programs and services are built to use the 
earlier infrastructure, which has lasted decades. Quic has been in public 
development for nearly eight years since Google first announced Quic in 2013 as 
an experimental addition to its Chrome browser.

But upgrades to the internet's foundations are crucial to keep the 
world-spanning communication and commerce backbone humming. That's why 
engineers spend so much effort on titanic transitions like Quic, HTTPS for 
secure website communications, post-quantum cryptography to protect data from 
future quantum computers, and IPv6 for accommodating vastly more devices on the 
internet.

"The internet transport ecosystem has been ossified for decades now," Jana 
Iyengar, an engineer who helped lead Quic standardization at internet 
infrastructure company Fastly, said in a blog post. "Quic is poised to lead the 
charge on the next generation of internet innovations."

INTERNET PLUMBING UPGRADES

In a 2017 research paper on Quic, Google said its in-house version of the 
technology cut the wait for web search results by 8% on PCs and 4% on phones. 
The time that people wasted on  YouTube buffering -- waiting for video to catch 
up to playback -- dropped 18% for PC users and 15% for mobile users.

Upgrading TCP

Transmission Control Protocol governs how data is sent from one computing 
device to another across the internet. TCP and Quic work in conjunction with 
another seminal standard, IP, short for Internet Protocol. TCP controls how 
data is broken up into packets that are individually addressed, sent across the 
internet's routing infrastructure and then reassembled at the other end of the 
connection.

It's TCP's job to make the internet resilient enough to withstand nuclear 
attacks. Among other things, TCP handles how connections are established and 
how to recover data packets that are lost in transmission.

Quic is designed to do the same tasks, but better.

It co-opts another internet standard, called UDP (User Datagram Protocol), 
that's faster than TCP but lacks TCP's mechanism to recover lost packets. Quic 
has its own separate recovery mechanism that's faster than TCP's. (When Google 
first announced Quic, the company said it stood for Quick UDP Internet 
Connection, but the IETF standard says Quic isn't an acrnoym.)

Quic is also faster at setting up encrypted connections, an important 
consideration since Quic, like TCP before it, is a foundation of the HTTP 
standard your browser uses to fetch web pages. At the full scale of the 
internet, little delays add up to a big problem.

Quic should handle network changes more gracefully, like when you leave your 
home Wi-Fi and start using your phone's cellular network.
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