IP over Avian Carriers with Quality of Service (1999)

(rfc-editor.org)

28 points | by mig4ng 4 hours ago

8 comments

  • jonathanlydall 4 minutes ago
    In 2009 when South African IT communication was essentially only permitted through a single entity, as a publicity stunt a small ISP did an implementation of this:

    https://pigeonrace2009.co.za/

    As I recall at the time, the best consumer speeds available were 512kbps with a 3GB per month cap at today’s cost of about 45USD.

    The worst part (especially as a WoW player) is that QoS was applied giving priority to ports 80, 443, 110 and 25. This resulted in all other ports having terrible latency, probably added 150ms on top of the unavoidable (due to speed of light) 190ms to get to European servers.

    Fortunately today the situation is much better, there are numerous FNO companies and even more numerous ISPs for each.

    I pay about 45 USD for an uncapped 100Mbps connection.

  • breppp 49 minutes ago
    Reminds me of that AWS hard drive truck thing where your data is sent with quite the latency
  • 71bw 1 hour ago
    > One major benefit to using Avian Carriers is that this is the only networking technology that earns frequent flyer miles, plus the Concorde and First classes of service earn 50% bonus miles per packet.

    :D

  • block_dagger 1 hour ago
    Bird Internet?
  • iso1631 2 hours ago
    > Carriers in the queue too long may leave log entries

    > Avian Carriers MAY eat the NATs.

    There's always something I've not spotted / forgotten before with these

  • nurettin 50 minutes ago
    Horse heads have also been used historically to send messages of a certain nature.
    • dredmorbius 38 minutes ago
      With guaranteed receipt. Or at least, they cannot be refused.
  • theginger 2 hours ago
    Disappointed there still isn't a protocol for sending messages in a bottle.
    • tosti 1 hour ago
      There ain't an RFC for morse code, either.
  • mapt 2 hours ago
    Send a raven to Pyongyang.
    • mghackerlady 58 minutes ago
      or you can just like, email them. Their overseas news agencies have email addresses