Originally posted by: Pulsar
Originally posted by: spidey07
What? You guys don't want your gaming and porn to run smoothly?
I want gaming to be put into a low drop precedence queue. I want video conferencing to be put into an expedited forwarding queue. I want and deserve the future of the internets. Keep in mind that QoS only applies when congestion occurs, and there is ALWAYS some congestion along each hop. That's why diffserv calls it Per Hop Behavior. Do you REALLY want to prevent this? Is this really what you want?
If you support net neutrality you are preventing The Internet from evolving into the voice, video and data networks it needs to be. If you support it you are damning all users. The Internet is mostly best effort today, and that's why your voice, video, gaming and webcam porn sucks.
You know, it's interesting. Right now, I can game pretty well over my mobile broadband, and I'm pretty happy with my service. I think the same can be said of most people.
Yet, you want to provide me "better" service, by prioritizing different things. That sounds good to me. But never, in the history of anything I've ever purchased, have I seen prices come down as a result of an action you're talking about. A gaming "motherboard"? Be prepared for a premium. A gaming "NIC"? Be prepared for a premium. A gaming "mouse"? Same. A gaming "laptop"? Same.
See, the thing is Spidey, I'm an engineer too. I look at what you say, and it makes perfect engineering sense. It also adds complexity. Hardware. Software. Support. Etc. Etc.
None of which is free to the company. Meaning, none of which is going to be free to me. At the same time, as you said, the providers are already starting to go to Docsis 3, which is another huge improvement.
We can already stream TV video at good resolution. We can already play video games. We can already use voip without an issue.
So tell us what problem it is you're aiming to fix, and how it's not going to cost us any more than what we already have (which is more than sufficient in 99% of the cases). You can't. You know it. You're arguing from an engineer's perspective trying to fix a problem that, right now, isn't really a problem from an end user point of view.