Well, yes of course. But not everyone has enough bandwidth.

On 7 June 2012 15:05, Neil J. McRae <[email protected]> wrote:

>  IP networks 101.
>
>  If you have enough bandwidth everything gets a good deal.
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On 7 Jun 2012, at 10:42, "Justin Finkelstein" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>   nteresting; so it sounds, from what you say, that by default VoIP gets
> a "good deal" out of the available bandwidth?
>
> On 7 June 2012 09:55, Adrian Kennard <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> On 07/06/12 09:45, Justin Finkelstein wrote:
>> >
>> > This may be the wrong forum for this message, but I was wondering about
>> > how VoIP is handled as part of people's various traffic shaping policies
>> > - i.e. is this something people take account of?
>>
>>  Our LNSs know the rate of every line, and shape to match the line rate
>> but with small packets having more priority over large - this works well
>> for VoIP, but also ACK packets, DNS, interactive (key strokes), etc. We
>> find people can fill their line with torrents and still have perfect
>> VoIP calls.
>>
>> > Also: if one of the UK's ISP's decided to implement QoS on their
>> > customer base's users and then prioritise VoIP, what kind of impact
>> > would this have on the upstream network?
>>
>>  Upstream is not usually an issue as it is not usually congested!
>
>
>


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