In a message written on Wed, Apr 23, 2003 at 10:52:16PM -0400, Sean Donelan wrote:
One antidote to selfish routing, the two researchers found, is more capacity. Optimum overall system speeds can be restored despite selfish routing by either doubling the number of lanes on a highway or doubling the bandwidth of a communications link. Particularly in the case of roads, however, that is rarely practical or even desirable.
Primary path gets full. Provider routes to secondary path, which is better than primary path when full. Users and provider discover life would be better when primary path had more bandwidth. News at 11. I mean, really, the fact that a secondary path is worse than a primary path with no capacity is a no brainer, couldn't these people be doing something more useful? -- Leo Bicknell - bicknell@ufp.org - CCIE 3440 PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/ Read TMBG List - tmbg-list-request@tmbg.org, www.tmbg.org