…15 ms is also the typical latency of the first hop in
wired connections (and in fact is the low end,) so
we can reasonably expect the full range of latencies
to be equivalent to the same of wired connections.
You're comparing apples to apples and finding them
equivalent on the first hop. Further upstream there
is necessarily another 15 ms hop to ground but even
that is typically on the low end for equivalent fiber nets.
One difference that may interest you is that the orbital
infrastructure which carries packets for most of the trip is
close to 33% quicker due to physics. Fiber propagates
at only ⅔ of the speed of light so latencies in space get
a boost, racing ahead of fiber over greater distances.
Latencies will, therefore, be comparable or better.
…15 ms is also the typical latency of the first hop in
wired connections (and in fact is the low end,) so
we can reasonably expect the full range of latencies
to be equivalent to the same of wired connections.
You're comparing apples to apples and finding them
equivalent on the first hop. Further upstream there
is necessarily another 15 ms hop to ground but even
that is typically on the low end for equivalent fiber nets.
One difference that may interest you is that the orbital
infrastructure which carries packets for most of the trip is
close to 33% quicker due to physics. Fiber propagates
at only ⅔ of the speed of light so latencies in space get
a boost, racing ahead of fiber over greater distances.
Latencies will, therefore, be comparable or better.
The uploader's declaration exempts that upload from
mass censorship, forces all complainants to acknowledge
the uploader's declaration on that upload and then must
negotiate directly, leaving the website entirely shielded.
That saves a website both automatic and manual effort.
The uploader's declaration exempts that upload from
mass censorship, forces all complainants to acknowledge
the uploader's declaration on that upload and negotiate
directly, leaving the website entirely shielded.
That saves the website both automatic and manual effort.
…that "probe" never actually DOES any of “investigate,
look in to, examine, analyze”, etc.? It simply implies
that the politicians are paying attention without actually
having to do a thing besides come up with a tweet a few
months later. ; ]
Re: Re: I never heard the U.S. say Huawei IS spying…
It already has, and with evidence to back it up. ; ]
On the firmware updates, only wide updates should be
allowed. There should be no targeting of coffee shops
near government offices or similar tactics which could
surround sensitive areas without compromising routers
that are under tighter management. It makes sense that
China could create a whole map of equipment near the
protected areas but without the same local surveillance
and then set update servers to fill the map accordingly.
Re: Re: I never heard the U.S. say Huawei IS spying…
It already has, and with evidence to back it up. ; ]
On the firmware updates, only wide updates should be
allowed. There should be no targeting of coffee shops
near government offices or similar tactics which could
surround sensitive areas without compromising routers
that are under tighter management. It makes sense that
China could create a whole map of equipment near the
protected areas but without the same local surveillance
and then set update servers to fill the map accordingly.
…but they are so tightly bound to Xi Jinping's regime
that they are clearly vulnerable to influence once 5G
equipment's installed and running everywhere. That's
when it would only take a wave of firmware updates
to turn the potential threat into reality; all in a network
environment vastly accelerated and much harder for
the NSA and friends to surveil for precisely that action.
All I ever heard mentioned officially is this POTENTIAL.
Only the press has been looking for CURRENT activity.
Somebody should suggest that firmware updates
must pass muster before widespread release, and
when China starts blocking and threatening nations
who pass such legislation: THEN we have evidence. ; ]
On the post: AT&T, Verizon Employees Caught Up In DOJ SIM Hijacking Bust
You two seem to know a lot about this stuff…
…so why are you two smiling all the time? ; ]
On the post: AT&T, Verizon Employees Caught Up In DOJ SIM Hijacking Bust
You two seem to know a lot about this stuff…
…so why are you smiling all the time? ; ]
On the post: Selling Fear? There's An App For That
That they are so full of fear and hate and spread it widely…
…simply proves that they are not Christians at all.
That's what antichrists always do, and will inevitably lead
to attacking real Christians when things get scary.
On the post: Selling Fear? There's An App For That
That they are so full of fear and hate and spread it widely…
…simply proves that they are not Christians at all.
That's what antichrists always do, and will inevitably lead
to attacking real Christians when things get scary.
On the post: FCC Fixes Giant Error Over-Stating Broadband Availability... Then Doubles Down On Bogus Claims
Actually…
…15 ms is also the typical latency of the first hop in
wired connections (and in fact is the low end,) so
we can reasonably expect the full range of latencies
to be equivalent to the same of wired connections.
You're comparing apples to apples and finding them
equivalent on the first hop. Further upstream there
is necessarily another 15 ms hop to ground but even
that is typically on the low end for equivalent fiber nets.
One difference that may interest you is that the orbital
infrastructure which carries packets for most of the trip is
close to 33% quicker due to physics. Fiber propagates
at only ⅔ of the speed of light so latencies in space get
a boost, racing ahead of fiber over greater distances.
Latencies will, therefore, be comparable or better.
On the post: FCC Fixes Giant Error Over-Stating Broadband Availability... Then Doubles Down On Bogus Claims
Actually…
…15 ms is also the typical latency of the first hop in
wired connections (and in fact is the low end,) so
we can reasonably expect the full range of latencies
to be equivalent to the same of wired connections.
You're comparing apples to apples and finding them
equivalent on the first hop. Further upstream there
is necessarily another 15 ms hop to ground but even
that is typically on the low end for equivalent fiber nets.
One difference that may interest you is that the orbital
infrastructure which carries packets for most of the trip is
close to 33% quicker due to physics. Fiber propagates
at only ⅔ of the speed of light so latencies in space get
a boost, racing ahead of fiber over greater distances.
Latencies will, therefore, be comparable or better.
On the post: Why Your Holiday Photos And Videos Of The Restored Notre Dame Cathedral Could Be Blocked By The EU's Upload Filters
How about this?
The uploader's declaration exempts that upload from
mass censorship, forces all complainants to acknowledge
the uploader's declaration on that upload and then must
negotiate directly, leaving the website entirely shielded.
That saves a website both automatic and manual effort.
On the post: Why Your Holiday Photos And Videos Of The Restored Notre Dame Cathedral Could Be Blocked By The EU's Upload Filters
How about this?
On the post: The End Of The Absurdity: Iceland, The Country, Successfully Invalidates The Trademark Of Iceland Foods, The Grocer
Off topic, but…
…why is the comments counter off by one on many posts?
The only posts that ever show zero comments before
someone submits a comment are Daily Deals.
All the others show "1 Comments" before then.
On the post: UK Now Proposes Ridiculous Plan To Fine Internet Companies For Vaguely Defined 'Harmful Content'
Doesn't everyone know?
On the post: UK Now Proposes Ridiculous Plan To Fine Internet Companies For Vaguely Defined 'Harmful Content'
Doesn't everyone know? ; ]
On the post: Court Documents Show Canadian Law Enforcement Operated Stingrays Indiscriminately, Sweeping Up Thousands Of Innocent Phone Owners
Don't forget…
…we invented hockey. ; P
On the post: FTC Launches Probe Into Telecom Privacy Issues. But Whether They'll Act Is Another Matter Entirely
Have you noticed…
…that "probe" never actually DOES any of “investigate,
look in to, examine, analyze”, etc.? It simply implies
that the politicians are paying attention without actually
having to do a thing besides come up with a tweet a few
months later. ; ]
On the post: US Huawei Blackballing Efforts Stall Due To Lack Of 'Actual Facts'
Re: Re: I never heard the U.S. say Huawei IS spying…
It already has, and with evidence to back it up. ; ]
On the firmware updates, only wide updates should be
allowed. There should be no targeting of coffee shops
near government offices or similar tactics which could
surround sensitive areas without compromising routers
that are under tighter management. It makes sense that
China could create a whole map of equipment near the
protected areas but without the same local surveillance
and then set update servers to fill the map accordingly.
On the post: US Huawei Blackballing Efforts Stall Due To Lack Of 'Actual Facts'
Re: Re: I never heard the U.S. say Huawei IS spying…
It already has, and with evidence to back it up. ; ]
On the firmware updates, only wide updates should be
allowed. There should be no targeting of coffee shops
near government offices or similar tactics which could
surround sensitive areas without compromising routers
that are under tighter management. It makes sense that
China could create a whole map of equipment near the
protected areas but without the same local surveillance
and then set update servers to fill the map accordingly.
On the post: A Big Copyright Mess: Miel Bredouw, Barstool Sports, Slob On My Carol Of The Bells And The DMCA
That's what I call them…
…and that's what Wikipedia calls them…
[ You probably should have read the wiki ; ]
…and Bamboo Harvester probably says so too. ; P
On the post: US Huawei Blackballing Efforts Stall Due To Lack Of 'Actual Facts'
I never heard the U.S. say Huawei IS spying…
…but they are so tightly bound to Xi Jinping's regime
that they are clearly vulnerable to influence once 5G
equipment's installed and running everywhere. That's
when it would only take a wave of firmware updates
to turn the potential threat into reality; all in a network
environment vastly accelerated and much harder for
the NSA and friends to surveil for precisely that action.
All I ever heard mentioned officially is this POTENTIAL.
Only the press has been looking for CURRENT activity.
Somebody should suggest that firmware updates
must pass muster before widespread release, and
when China starts blocking and threatening nations
who pass such legislation: THEN we have evidence. ; ]
On the post: Security Researcher Discovers Flaws In Yelp-For-MAGAs App, Developer Threatens To Report Him To The Deep State
Depends:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cracker_%28term%29
Is this close enough? ; ]
On the post: A Big Copyright Mess: Miel Bredouw, Barstool Sports, Slob On My Carol Of The Bells And The DMCA
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellipsis
It's called an ellipsis.
On the post: A Big Copyright Mess: Miel Bredouw, Barstool Sports, Slob On My Carol Of The Bells And The DMCA
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellipsis
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