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User: strangeintp

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  1. Re:I'm confused... on Verizon's Accidental Mea Culpa · · Score: 1

    thanks... so is L3 an end-user service provider as well? I.e., do they deliver content last-mile to consumers? If not, then it seems like the business arrangement is itself faulty from the get-go. One should *expect* the majority of flow to be from the producers (like Netflix) to the consumer (me). Is the bidirectional peering arrangement based on the *ability* to accept equivalent flow, or on *actual* balanced flow? If the former, then it's not L3's fault if they've built out to handle it but the customers just aren't demanding the content from Verizon's side of the interconnect. If the latter, then yes it sounds like L3 may have signed up to an agreement that inherently (contractually) limits their ability to deliver content across the interconnect, towards Verizon's network. It sounds like this is more of a poor contracting arrangement, and there aren't any real technology and associated cost issues here, but just that Verizon feels they're getting screwed, or at the very least have an easy excuse to claim contractual foul (just trying to be objective; trust me, I'm no supporter of the major ISPs). In that context I guess I understand Verizon's argument better now - they're essentially claiming Netflix/L-3 isn't a "peer", because of their high-content production and deliver - and want them to pay the "imbalanced" rates.

  2. I'm confused... on Verizon's Accidental Mea Culpa · · Score: 1

    Perhaps it is one or the other (or both) parties' intentions, but I'm now totally confused as to how the business arrangements are set up relative to the network architecture... I pay my ISP (happens to be Verizon but that's irrelevant for the purpose of this thought experiment) a certain amount per month to deliver content at a certain bitrate. Now I realize that's not a "guaranteed" rate, especially for peak times, but that's another issue (IMO, Verizon should not be overselling their bandwidth to such an extent that they can't deliver a certain minimum threshold of performance during peak usage, or minimum likelihood of achieving published bandwidth during peak usage). Do the content providers (and by proxy or extension their network hardware and infrastructure subs) - especially the high-bandwidth content providers like Netflix - *not* pay for a certain network capacity? If, for example, as a content provider, I expect to need to deliver 50 Gbps based on the size of my customer base and peak usage rates, then I would build out my network infrastructure to supply that, and contract with the service providers to provide appropriately sized interconnects and deliver that to subscribers. That sounds like a pretty simple arrangement to me - simple enough that it should be relatively easy to identify who's not holding up their end of the bargain. But it must not be the case, becase that doesn't seem to be happening. Verizon is talking about balanced vs. imbalanced arrangements, and Level 3 is talking about proportionate mileage costs etc. Perhaps one of you telecom experts - hopefully someone who is independent of either type of provider - can illuminate the situation for "lay" people.

  3. Level 3 blog post unavailable on Verizon's Accidental Mea Culpa · · Score: 1

    Just tried going to the link, it's been 404'ed.

  4. Re:When I saw the title... on The Game Theory of Life · · Score: 1

    I would have modded +1 funny if I could. My first impression with the headline was similar.

  5. Re:How does this differ from John Holland's work ? on The Game Theory of Life · · Score: 2

    I haven't read that specific work but I have read "Hidden Order: How Adaptation Builds Complexity", so I am generally familiar with his conceptual framework. I agree, they are all offering the same explanation. I think the difference may be that Holland did not lay it out mathematically in a game theory framework. For another perspective, check out Stuart Kauffman's "Origins of Order", which also provides an analytical (though not equation-based) treatment.

  6. Hope is not lost.... on NSA Surveillance Reform Bill Passes House 303 Votes To 121 · · Score: 1

    It still needs to make it through the Senate.

  7. 'nuff said

  8. Did anybody RTFA? on New Drug Mimics the Beneficial Effects of Exercise · · Score: 0

    In the first paragraph, it states the drug "increases exercise endurance in animal models". It goes on to say "activation of Rev-erbα with SR9009 led to increased metabolic activity in skeletal muscle in both culture and in mice. The treated mice had a 50 percent increase in running capacity, measured by both time and distance."

    I doubt the implication is that you can sit around on your ass popping these pills and expect to get buff...

  9. NMCI does too... on U.S. Army Block Access To The Guardian's Website Over NSA Leaks · · Score: 0

    I discovered a couple days ago that NMCI blocked access to the Guardian's online site, period.

    It's really as simple as this: yes, the information is out there and you can get it at home (though we were directed not to look for it), but the bottom line is, if classified info ends up on unclass machines, somebody needs to "clean" the machine.

    It's easier to just block the website and save themselves the trouble of having to clean up any incidental/accidental "spillage", regardless of how widespread or easily available the content actually is.

  10. Re:What a name. on Cyber Vulnerabilities Found In Navy's Newest Warship · · Score: 0

    Love the Banks reference.

  11. Paradoxically, the research was done by one ... on Brain Cells Made From Urine · · Score: 0

    Dr. Pei!

  12. Speaking of crappy reporting... on Mars Rover Finds Complex Chemicals But No Organic Compounds · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised nobody else has pointed out yet, the headline for the first-linked article says "Curiosity rover finds organic compounds...", directly refuting the statement in the first sentence of the article: "Curiosity rover hasn't yet confirmed the detection of organic compounds on Mars"... geez, what a flub. Who's editing at cosmiclog.nbcnews.com?

  13. Re:Why I've lost all trust in government on House Approves Extending the Warrantless Wiretapping Act · · Score: 0

    For what it's worth, I am a federal government employee, and I agree with you. Just because we're employees of the government doesn't mean we have to agree with everything the government does, or make us complicit in it's actions on principle.

  14. Re:"ubiquity"? Been there, done that on Is Gamification a Good Motivator? · · Score: 0

    Plus, it's a p.i.t.a. getting all those ribbons nice and neat on a dress uniform...

  15. And it took them *this* long... on Windows 8 To Feature 'Fast Startup Mode' · · Score: -1

    to figure that out?

  16. Most discussions missing the big picture... on Amazon Censorship Expands · · Score: 0

    Most of your discussions are missing the big picture, I think. Amazon is a private company and can sell what they want - as a consumer, I have options to procure my erotic incest fiction elsewhere, or just boycott Amazon altogether. *However*, what should be particularly disturbing is that Amazon removed ALREADY-PAID-FOR content from peoples' archives, and refused to provide refunds! How is that in the least excusable? Where is the defense of consumer rights? How is that not outright theft? Amazon should be summarily brought to court. As one previous poster noted, this type of behavior, and the de facto government protections enabling it (via DMCA and DRM), in practice means you don't own any of the DRMed stuff. It's being leased, without even any lease terms - they can just take it whenever they want. And they wonder why people want to crack their DRM b.s....

  17. P = NP? on Rubik's Cube Now Solvable in 20 Moves · · Score: 1

    What does Vinay Deolalikar have to say about this?

  18. Re:OK, I'll play... on Washington's IT Guy · · Score: 1

    haha... yeah I skimmed the article as well... didn't get an inkling what all this "sunshine law" was all about. Far as I can tell, from a poorly written article with an even crappier introduction and non-summarizing first paragraph, is that it's about some guy's battle to get some posting to the Gov't Print Office by the Obama administration.

  19. It's quite ridiculous in the first place... on SourceForge Clarifies Denial of Site Access · · Score: 1

    It's quite ridiculous in the first place that the US gov't would attempt to selectively block access to information available on the WORLD WIDE WEB. It might be an annoyance, but it's not like it's really going to keep anybody from getting it, if they really want it.

  20. I'll believe it when... on Researchers Claim "Effectively Perfect" Spam Blocking Discovery · · Score: 2, Funny

    ..I don't see it.

  21. Re:because... on Testosterone Tumbling in American Males · · Score: 1

    The answer is plain and simple: the feminists have won. Think about when the feminist movement took off. There are definitely documented cases of psychosomatic coupling. Could it be that the feminisation of America (and who could argue that *that* hasn't happened? Separately from whether that is a good thing or not) has resulted in a populace whose mindset provides negative feedback into the testosterone-producing homunculus?

  22. Protecting our citizens on U.S. Service Personnel Data Stolen · · Score: 1

    This is precisely why we need to monitor everybody's telephone calls and net communications... If we had been keeping tabs on this guy, we would have none he was violating the privacy rights of millions of our sevicemen.

  23. RBCs on Alien Rain Over India · · Score: 1

    Shaky science at best... After navigating to the PDF of the actual article, I was a little astounded at first too, until I noticed that they looked very much like red blood cells. Mammalian red blood cells do not have nuclei (i.e., no significant amount of DNA). AND... you would expect red blood cells to indicate quantities of iron. The authors need to do more definitive tests than just for DNA before I start latching on to the ET explanation. There have been well-documented cases of storms sucking up large quantities of matter (organic or otherwise, living or dead) and depositing it again somewhere else. Are there places in India that "bury" their dead by just shipping them off downriver or into the ocean? That seems to ring familiar, but I may be thinking of Neal Stephenson's "The Diamond Age". Or was there some event that occurred around June/July 2001 that killed off large numbers of mammals (to include humans)?