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Coded TCP
I understand and believe in the value of erasure coding, though I want to see the latency effects here. But that model was very detailed view into an overly simple (to the point of operationally unrealistic) model. Bad example, for a research paper.
George William Herbert
Sent from my iPhone
On Oct 23, 2012, at 8:57 PM, "Michael Painter" <tvhawaii at shaka.com> wrote:
> George Herbert wrote:
>> Modeled with just simple FTP sessions?
>>
>> Ugh: they admitted to having MIT backbone packet traces to analyze, and then used that simple of a simulator...
>
>
> The practical benefits of the technology, known as coded TCP, were seen on a recent test run on a New York-to-Boston Acela train, notorious for poor connectivity. By increasing their available bandwidth-the amount of data that can be relayed in a given period of time-Medard and students were able to watch blip-free YouTube videos while some other passengers struggled to get online. "They were asking us 'How did you do that?' and we said 'We're engineers!' " she jokes.
>
> More here:
> http://www.technologyreview.com/news/429722/a-bandwidth-breakthrough/?utm_campaign=newsletters&utm_source=newsletter-daily-all&utm_medium=email&utm_content=20121023
>
- References:
- Coded TCP
- From: rodrick.brown at gmail.com (Rodrick Brown)
- Coded TCP
- From: george.herbert at gmail.com (George Herbert)
- Coded TCP
- From: tvhawaii at shaka.com (Michael Painter)