Haven't read the whole paper yet, but below 600 Mbit/s is implied as being "Slow Internet" in the intro.
Haven't read the whole paper yet, but below 600 Mbit/s is implied as being "Slow Internet" in the intro.
But such a latency issue isn't majorly increasing battery usage (compared to a CPU usage issue which would make CPUs boost). Nor is it an issue for server-to-server communication.
It basically "only" slows down high bandwidth transmissions on end user devices with (for 2024 standards) very high speed connection (if you take effective speeds from device to server, not speeds you where advertised to have bough and at best can get when the server owner has a direct pairing agreement with you network provider and a server in your region.....).
Doesn't mean the paper is worthless, browser should improve their impl. and it highlights it.
But the title of the paper is basically 100% click bait.
So "Not Quick Enough" is plain out wrong, it is fast enough.
The definition of "Fast Internet" misleading.
And even "QUIC" is misleading as it normally refers to the protocol while the benchmarked protocol is HTTP/3 over QUIC and the issue seem to be mainly in the implementations.