On Tue, 27 Feb 2024, Dave Taht wrote:
Ooops I meant this to be in response to your last point below...
On Tue, Feb 27, 2024 at 2:31 AM Dave Taht wrote:
Starlink has described how to peer with them extensively now. It is
still kind of confusing to me - say I had fios to the business, and a
AS
On 27/02/2024 7:21 pm, David Lang wrote:
...snip
> The point though is that these sparsely populated areas aren't where
the
> scalability issue arises. Capacity needs to be where the demand for
it is.
I only partially agree with you here. Yes, capacity that isn't needed
doesn't
matter, but I
Hi,
Will quickly jump in for one of the points discussed here.
but as I understand the reverse-engineering of the starlink system, a given
cell
is currently only serviced by one satellite at a time.
Are we sure here? One (classic) Dishy is served by one satellite at a time, but
a cell (which c
I'm curious at what's needed by iperf here to help with connection
timeouts.
Bob
EXCERPT:
A Multifaceted Look at Starlink Performance
Nitinder Mohan∗ Technical University of Munich Germany
Andrew E. Ferguson∗ The University of Edinburgh United Kingdom
Hendrik Cech∗ Technical University of Mu
Dave Taht via Starlink wrote:
> One of the things I learned today was that starlink has published an
> extensive guide as to how existing BGP AS holders can peer with them to
> get better service. I am curious if there is a way to see how many have
> peered already, how many they
> On Feb 27, 2024, at 08:54, Dave Taht wrote:
> One of the things I learned today was that starlink has published an
> extensive guide as to how existing BGP AS holders can peer with them to get
> better service.
Yes, essentially every AS does this. The ones that follow best-practices tend