Some of the pipes Netflix goes through is also used by other services that aren't as adaptable. ----- Mike Hammett Intelligent Computing Solutions Midwest Internet Exchange The Brothers WISP ----- Original Message ----- From: "Blake Hudson" <blake@ispn.net> To: nanog@nanog.org Sent: Friday, March 20, 2020 8:32:45 AM Subject: Re: COVID-19 vs. our Networks On 3/19/2020 12:22 PM, Mark Tinka wrote:
On 19/Mar/20 18:07, Matt Hoppes wrote:
Agreed... 720 or 1080 Netflix will work just as fine as 4K for the next month or two. Well, the article claims "Drop stream quality from HD". That means 4K, 1080p and 720p.
If you have an OCA on your network, how does this encourage consumers to use the "extra bandwidth" for anything else?
Are we assuming we know how consumers want to spend their time now?
Mark.
Across several eyeball networks I'm not seeing any noticeable increase in peak (95%) demand between now and January. Since Netflix automatically scales down data rates in the event of congestion, the only thing I foresee forcing Netflix to reduce data rates [ahead of any congestion] would accomplish is causing excess link capacity to go unused (wasted). This sounds like a policy decision made without a technical argument... e.g. not a data driven decision, but a decision made out of fear or panic.