On Tue, 7 Nov 2017 16:09:07 -0800
Rick Stevens <ri...@alldigital.com> wrote:

> Specs (open or not) often have little to do with it. It's more trying
> to figure out how the bloody hardware works. If you don't know which
> bits to fiddle on the chip, you may never get the speeds the thing
> supposedly advertises. Most Windows drivers are produced with the
> assistance of the manufacturer of the hardware because M$ funds it.
> On the flip side, I'd bet the majority of Linux drivers are reversed
> engineered and in some cases, the manufacturers actively try to
> hinder development (Texas Instruments was notorious for this 8-10
> years ago).

I interpret this as meaning that the wireless standard isn't really
*standard*.  That is, that there can be extras above and beyond the
standard that allow a manufacturer to enhance their offering with their
own driver, yet allow generic drivers to work with their device at
reduced throughput.  Would that be a correct interpretation?

> Take any info that the Windows drivers report with a large grain of
> salt (perhaps even an entire salt lick). They've been known to, uhm,
> "fudge" the actual performance numbers. Even ignoring that, my
> machine is hardwired to another machine over a 1Gbps wire. I know I
> should get 1Gbps between the two, but in reality I get 850Mbps at
> best. That's the nature of the beast...there's a certain amount of
> overhead in TCP/IP you'll never, ever get past (on copper/glass
> links, 10-15%, on wifi it's higher).

Thus, the ~10 bits per byte of transferred data that fred mentioned as
his ballpark conversion for TCP. True? 
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