On the flip-side, what is the penalty for getting Telehealth calls wrong? It could be death. I’m gonna go coin “megaband” and the minimum upload is going to be 10,000mbps. I’m not sure there’s a rational objection to any of this. Why should humans spend our lifetimes waiting on machines? 640k, that’s all I have to say on the matter. -LB Ms. Lady Benjamin PD Cannon of Glencoe, ASCE 6x7 Networks & 6x7 Telecom, LLC CEO ben@6by7.net "The only fully end-to-end encrypted global telecommunications company in the world.” ANNOUNCING: 6x7 GLOBAL MARITIME <https://alexmhoulton.wixsite.com/6x7networks> FCC License KJ6FJJ
On May 31, 2021, at 6:14 PM, Mike Hammett <nanog@ics-il.net> wrote:
How many simultaneous telehealth calls can you be in at a time? In my close family (15 - 20 people), do you know how rare it is to have a medical appointment in the same week as someone else, much less the same exact time, much less the same exact time *and* in the same household?
That's the difference between people speaking emotionally and people speaking rationally. Well sure, *everyone* has to care about healthcare, so let's throw healthcare on the list of OMG things. No one is helped by people trying to debate something's merit based on emotions.
Yes, WFH (or e-learning) is much more likely to have simultaneous uses.
Yes, I agree that 3 megs is getting thin for three video streams. Not impossible, but definitely a lot more hairy. So then what about moving the upload definition to 5 megs? 10 megs? 20 megs? Why does it need to be 100 megs?
----- Mike Hammett Intelligent Computing Solutions http://www.ics-il.com <http://www.ics-il.com/>
Midwest-IX http://www.midwest-ix.com <http://www.midwest-ix.com/>
From: "Owen DeLong" <owen@delong.com> To: "Mike Hammett" <nanog@ics-il.net> Cc: "Abhi Devireddy" <abhi@devireddy.com>, nanog@nanog.org Sent: Monday, May 31, 2021 5:17:36 AM Subject: Re: New minimum speed for US broadband connections
On May 28, 2021, at 06:56 , Mike Hammett <nanog@ics-il.net <mailto:nanog@ics-il.net>> wrote:
"Bad connection" measures way more than throughput.
What about WFH or telehealth doesn't work on 25/3?
Pretty much everything if you have, say, 3+ people in your house trying to do it at once…
A decent Zoom call requires ~750Kbps of upstream bandwidth. When you get two kids doing remote school and mom and dad each doing $DAYJOB via teleconferences, that 3Mbps gets spread pretty thin, especially if you’ve got any other significant use of your upstream connection (e.g. kids posting to Tik Tok, etc.)
Sure, for a single individual, 25/3 might be fine. For a household that has the industry standard 2.53 people, it might even still work, but barely. Much above that average and things degrade rapidly and not very gracefully.
Owen
----- Mike Hammett Intelligent Computing Solutions http://www.ics-il.com <http://www.ics-il.com/>
Midwest-IX http://www.midwest-ix.com <http://www.midwest-ix.com/>
From: "Abhi Devireddy" <abhi@devireddy.com <mailto:abhi@devireddy.com>> To: nanog@nanog.org <mailto:nanog@nanog.org>, "Jason Canady" <jason@unlimitednet.us <mailto:jason@unlimitednet.us>> Sent: Friday, May 28, 2021 8:07:34 AM Subject: Re: New minimum speed for US broadband connections
Don't think it needs to change? From 25/3? Telehealth and WFH would like to talk with you.
There's very few things more draining than a conference call with someone who's got a bad connection. Abhi
Abhi Devireddy
From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+abhi=devireddy.com@nanog.org <mailto:nanog-bounces+abhi=devireddy.com@nanog.org>> on behalf of Jason Canady <jason@unlimitednet.us <mailto:jason@unlimitednet.us>> Sent: Friday, May 28, 2021 7:39:14 AM To: nanog@nanog.org <mailto:nanog@nanog.org> <nanog@nanog.org <mailto:nanog@nanog.org>> Subject: Re: New minimum speed for US broadband connections
I second Mike.
On 5/28/21 8:37 AM, Mike Hammett wrote: I don't think it needs to change.
----- Mike Hammett Intelligent Computing Solutions http://www.ics-il.com <http://www.ics-il.com/>
Midwest-IX http://www.midwest-ix.com <http://www.midwest-ix.com/>
From: "Sean Donelan" <sean@donelan.com> <mailto:sean@donelan.com> To: nanog@nanog.org <mailto:nanog@nanog.org> Sent: Thursday, May 27, 2021 7:29:08 PM Subject: New minimum speed for US broadband connections
What should be the new minimum speed for "broadband" in the U.S.?
This is the list of past minimum broadband speed definitions by year
year speed
1999 200 kbps in both directions (this was chosen as faster than dialup/ISDN speeds)
2000 200 kbps in at least one direction (changed because too many service providers had 128 kbps upload)
2010 4 mbps down / 1 mbps up
2015 25 Mbps down / 3 Mbps up (wired) 5 Mbps down / 1 Mbps up (wireless)
2021 ??? / ??? (some Senators propose 100/100 mbps)
Not only in major cities, but also rural areas
Note, the official broadband definition only means service providers can't advertise it as "broadband" or qualify for subsidies; not that they must deliver better service.