On 31/07/2012 5:28 AM, Monty Brandenberg wrote:
> On 7/30/2012 2:15 PM, Celierra Darling wrote:
>
>> FYI, the Firefox folks had a conversation in 2008 and decided to bump up
>> from 2 to 6 by default at that time (partly because everyone else was
>> raising it).[1]  (And for what it's worth, I found a mention from '06
>> that "anything above 10 is excessive".[2])  That doesn't necessarily
>> mean SL viewers should use the same values, but I think it probably
>> demonstrates where people might try to push that setting, at least at first.
>>
>> [1] https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=423377#c4
>> [2]
>> http://kb.mozillazine.org/index.php?title=Network.http.max-persistent-connections-per-server&diff=28784&oldid=28783
> On the limiting side of things, we have to deal with this
> unfortunately:
>
> http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/wireless/wireless-reviews/26843-linksyswrt54gv5reallyisalousyrouter?showall=&start=4
>
> Finding a one-size-fits-all solution is a challenge when the consumer
> space performance range spans a 3000:1 ratio.
>
> I also did some tests on throughput-vs-concurrency and at 10
> connections we're falling away from linear speedup.  The example
> code in the new library happens to be a performance test framework
> should anyone want to play...
>
It seems almost everyone I know has a linksys WRT. Heck *I* have one,
myself - the rev 2 - and there's three of us feeding through that. (Many
of the non US models have their firmware in ROM, rather than in flash
and can't be updated with DD-WRT). Heck, I know one person with two. A
Belkin G *and* a Linksys WRT.

Rubbish consumer routers are hard to ignore, even if you've got a good
one yourself.

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