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North American Network Operators Group Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical Re: links on the blink (fwd)
On Sat, 4 Nov 1995, Scott Bradner wrote: > > > 10% packet loss is quite within the normal range of parameters for a > > packet switching network such as the Internet. > > Well, I don't think I will need to be reminded not to buy Internet service > from your organization. Why not? We don't run the Internet, we just connect people to it. And our 10Mbps fibre ATM link rarely gets to 25% utilization. > I consider it a problem when the loss exceeds 1% through this long path - > as do the people who run the networks that my traffic passes through. The > normal loss through this path is less than 1% and, much of the time it is 0. momentary samples such as yours are meaningless. One moment you can have 0% loss, the next moment 10%. I will agree that sustained high loss levels are not acceptable, but isolated ping measurements do not measure that. > > But nothing is broken. There is no inter-ISP level. > > It is so much easier to just say it is the other guy's problem. > Hans-Werner suggests that most phone companies do not take this attitude, I disagree. If you get busy signals or recorded messages from a telco other than the one who provides your local phone service, the most they will do is to promise you that they will look into it and/or inform the company whose service appears to be the problem. This is all any ISP can do when a customer complains that ISP X is not reachable or that ISP X's site appears to be overloaded. I am talking about ISP's here, not NSP's. Michael Dillon Voice: +1-604-546-8022 Memra Software Inc. Fax: +1-604-542-4130 http://www.memra.com E-mail: michael@memra.com
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