Arjuna Sathiaseelan | 2 Feb 2012 21:50
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Re: end2end-interest Digest, Vol 95, Issue 2

Deltef - I wish rest of the world is good as you :)..In a fair world,
TCP as it is perfectly fine to exist..But in a selfish world, are
people really following the principles that was laid by TCP in the
first place? Otherwise BIC, CUBIC and Compound TCP wouldnt have found
their way onto the OSs...

So for google to say increase the window rather than use multiple
parallel TCP connections seem to be a rather fair argument - give the
app designers to use better CC rather than find methods to circumvent
it..

You know better :)..

Regards
Arjuna

> As I was told by a Telco guy, the first and main duty of a customer of
> the "Deutsche Bundespost" was not to disturb the system and not to
> disturb other customers.
>
> In times of "social skill" and "EQ", this is sometimes referred to as
> living in a well behaved community. And in that, Google plays _one_
> role. Like any other people in the world. Google is not alone on this
> planet.
>
>
>> any congestion signal...with better network response (ECN, Re-ECN etc)
>> - TCP could well change its behaviour..
>>
>
(Continue reading)

Stjepan Groš | 2 Feb 2012 22:33
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Re: end2end-interest Digest, Vol 95, Issue 2

On Čet, 2012-02-02 at 20:50 +0000, Arjuna Sathiaseelan wrote:
> Deltef - I wish rest of the world is good as you :)..In a fair world,
> TCP as it is perfectly fine to exist..But in a selfish world, are
> people really following the principles that was laid by TCP in the
> first place? Otherwise BIC, CUBIC and Compound TCP wouldnt have found
> their way onto the OSs...

I couldn't resist but to give a comment on the introductory part of this
paragraph:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragedy_of_the_commons

Regards,
SG

> So for google to say increase the window rather than use multiple
> parallel TCP connections seem to be a rather fair argument - give the
> app designers to use better CC rather than find methods to circumvent
> it..
>
> You know better :)..
> 
> Regards
> Arjuna
> 
> > As I was told by a Telco guy, the first and main duty of a customer of
> > the "Deutsche Bundespost" was not to disturb the system and not to
> > disturb other customers.
> >
> > In times of "social skill" and "EQ", this is sometimes referred to as
(Continue reading)


Gmane