NetEqualizer News - Pacific Northwest Tech Seminar; Tell Us Who's Used Your NetEqualizer
Greetings!
Enjoy another issue of the NetEqualizer Newsletter. This month, we announce plans for our next complimentary NetEqualizer tech seminar and our new "Who's Used Your NetEqualizer?" offer. As always, feel free to pass this along to others who might be interested in NetEqualizer or AirEqualizer news.
In this issue:
NetEqualizer Tech Seminar Is Coming To The Pacific Northwest
Who's Used Your NetEqualizer?
Best Of The Blog
And The Flyaway Contest Winner Is...
NetEqualizer Tech Seminar Is Coming To The Pacific Northwest
On Wednesday, January 13, we will be hosting a complimentary NetEqualizer Seminar at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington. PLU, which is the home of over 3,000 students, has been a NetEqualizer user since 2008 and will provide for a first-hand look at the technology's capabilities.
We'll cover:
The various tradeoffs regarding how to stem p2p and bandwidth abuse
Recommendations for curbing RIAA requests
Demo of the new NetEqualizer network access control module
Lots of customer Q&A and information sharing on how Pacific Lutheran University is using the NetEqualizer, including some hands-on probing of a live system
When: Wednesday, January 13, 10 a.m. to noon
Where: Pacific Lutheran University
12180 Park Ave.
Tacoma, WA (Specific campus building and room number to come)
This technical user group, which in addition to our hosts includes invitees and NetEqualizer customers such as Everett Community College, the University of Puget Sound, and Northwest University, will be a great opportunity for current users and interested potential customers to learn more about the issues and challenges facing network administrators while also seeing the NetEqualizer in action.
If you're in the area, be sure not to miss this seminar! For more information, contact us at admin@apconnections.net.
Who's Used Your NetEqualizer?
Over the past few years, we've made a game of putting together lists of celebrities, politicians, and other notable Internet users who may have experienced the benefits of the NetEqualizer via our customers' networks (click here for more).
While we get our fair share of leads from casual conversations with NetEqualizer users, we've decided to make telling your story a little more enticing. So, we're offering a limited number of $25 gift certificates to any operator willing to tell us of the notable Internet users that have experienced the NetEqualizer simply by being a guest on their network. Good rumors welcome! :)
Best Of The Blog
How Does Your ISP Actually Enforce Your Internet Speed?
Have you ever wondered how your ISP manages to control the speed of your connection? If so, you might find the following article enlightening. Below, we'll discuss the various trade-offs used to control and break out bandwidth rate limits and the associated side effects with those techniques.
Dropping Packets
One of the simplest methods for a bandwidth controller to enforce a rate cap is by dropping packets. When using the packet-dropping method, the bandwidth controlling device will count the total number of bytes that cross a link during a second. If the target rate is exceeded during any single second, the bandwidth controller will drop packets for the remainder of that second. For example, if the bandwidth limit is 1 megabit, and the bandwidth controller counts 1 million bits gone by in 1/2 a second, it will then drop packets for the remainder of the second. The counter will then reset for the next second. From most evidence we have observed, rate caps enforced by many ISPs use the drop packet method as it is the least expensive method supported on most basic routers.
So, what is wrong with dropping packets to enforce a bandwidth cap?
Every few months, we have a drawing to give away two roundtrip domestic airline tickets from Frontier Airlines to one lucky person who's recently tried out our online NetEqualizer demo.
The time has come to announce this round's winner.