Nice deduction and bufferbloat hint.
For colleagues interested, this 'Revisit Edge' is now on IEEE Internet
Computing:
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9470987
Aaron
On 27.06.2021 13:10, Dave Taht wrote:
I think the arguments for re-invigorating the edge are stronger than
ever.
But first up, we gotta fix the bufferbloat everywhere.
On 27.06.2021 17:20, Phillip Hallam-Baker wrote:
The paper states typical latency is 30ms
Thus we are limited to 15 round trips per second.
I have a 960Gbs = 120 GBs Internet connection
Assuming 1260 byte packets, that means 95238 packets a second
So we must have an average of 3174 packets unacknowledged at 30ms
latency
Get latency down to 1ms and the number of unacknowledged packets goes
down
to 100.
On Sun, Jun 27, 2021 at 5:15 AM Aaron Ding wrote:
Is the motive for Edge (i.e., latency) diminishing since its first
concepts were formulated more than a decade ago?
A recent work to share on "Revisiting the Arguments for Edge Computing
Research":
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2106.12224.pdf