> 
> Buffers in most network gear is bad, don't do it.
> 

+1

I'm amazed at how many will spend money on switches with more buffering but 
won't take steps to ease the congestion.  Part of the reason is trying to 
convince non-technical people that packet loss in and of itself doesn't have to 
be a bad thing, that it allows applications to adapt to network conditions.  
They can use tools to see packet loss, that gives them something to complain 
about.  They don't know how to interpret jitter or understand what impact that 
has on their applications.  They just know that they can run some placket 
blaster and see a packet dropped and want that to go away, so we end up in 
"every packet is precious" mode.

They would rather have a download that starts and stops and starts and stops 
rather than have one that progresses smoothly from start to finish and trying 
to explain to them that performance is "bursty" because nobody wants to allow a 
packet to be dropped sails right over their heads.  

They'll accept crappy performance with no packet loss before they will accept 
better overall performance with an occasional packet lost.

If an applications is truly intolerant of packet loss, then you need to address 
the congestion, not get bigger buffers.


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