[Measurement-wg] Internet Speed Measurement: Current Challenges and Future Recommendations
Musab Isah
musab.isah at afrinic.net
Tue May 28 08:28:31 UTC 2019
This session starts in about 30 minutes. Kindly join via https://zoom.us/j/735484829.
Musab Isah
> On 21 May 2019, at 14:43, Musab Isah <musab.isah at afrinic.net> wrote:
>
> Dear all,
>
> For our Internet Africa reading group session of May, Amreesh will lead the discussion of the paper 'Internet Speed Measurement: Current Challenges and Future Recommendations’ by Nick Feamster and Jason Livingood [See Abstract below]. The paper could be downloaded from https://arxiv.org/pdf/1905.02334.pdf.
>
> Kindly join the meeting on 28 May 2019 by 09:00GMT via https://zoom.us/j/735484829.
>
> Best regards,
>
> Musab Isah
> Research Engineer,
> African Network Information Centre,
> Ebene, Mauritius
> Tel: +230 403 5100
>
>
> Abstract
> Government organizations, regulators, consumers, Internet service providers, and application providers alike all have an interest in measuring user Internet “speed”. A decade ago, speed measurement was more straightforward. Today, as access speeds have increased by an order of magnitude— many users have multi-hundred megabits per second service and gigabit speeds are available to tens of millions of homes— conventional approaches to speed testing no longer accurately reflect the user experience. Worse, some tests are increasingly divorced from performance metrics that users care about— the performance of the applications that they use—and others are completely unable to accurately measure contemporary broadband speeds. This paper offers historical and technical background on current speed testing methods, highlights their limitations as access network speeds continue to increase, and offers recommendations for the next generation of Internet “speed” measurement.
More information about the Measurement-wg
mailing list