[AusNOG] Speedtest results

Mark Smith markzzzsmith at gmail.com
Tue Dec 6 17:58:06 EST 2016


On 6 Dec. 2016 17:37, "paul+ausnog at oxygennetworks.com.au" <
paul+ausnog at oxygennetworks.com.au> wrote:

Sorry guys, I think maybe my point wasn’t explained correctly.



We are an ISP, we provide a service, let’s say at 20M for the customer.

The service is delivered at 20M so there are no issues, however when the
customer does a speed test at 12:35PM for example they see 4.8Mbit/s down
and 12Mbit/s up (pie in the sky figures of course)

So then they complain that they aren’t getting 20M because the speed test
says they aren’t, even though 5 staff are using you tube and they have
email coming through and other typical internet traffic which is consuming
some of their bandwidth.



So what I am looking for is some simple layman diagram which shows some
traffic and a link and what happens when you do a speed test whilst there
is other traffic on that link to show that they will never get full speed
on a speed test whilst they are actually using the link.

Thoughts ?




Draw it yourself, brand it and that distinguishes you from your competitors.

You can use this to get some ideas as to what to show.

https://www.slideshare.net/mobile/MarkSmith214/why-isps-cant-guarantee-internet-performance

Thanks

Paul



*From:* AusNOG [mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] *On Behalf Of *Paul
Wilkins
*Sent:* Tuesday, 6 December 2016 12:55 PM
*To:* AusNOG Mailing List
*Subject:* Re: [AusNOG] Speedtest results



If the customer can never get 20Mbps from anywhere, at 3:00am, you would
definitely have grounds of appeal to the ACCC or the telecoms ombudsman.

But otherwise, we're back to the problem of referring the problem to
someone else, in this case lawyers, to decide what your offer of
stoichometric service guarantees actually means. And no one is offering end
to end performance guarantees on a transit service.

Kind regards

Paul Wilkins



On 6 December 2016 at 12:36, Mark Smith <markzzzsmith at gmail.com> wrote:





On 6 Dec. 2016 12:09, "Paul Wilkins" <paulwilkins369 at gmail.com> wrote:

I don't think a diagramme is going to explain the complex stoichometric
behaviour of a packet switched network where traffic metrics -
throughput/latency/packet loss - are characterised by the complex
interrelationships of multiple time domain congested queues within a
distributed network.

I rather think that rather than addressing the fundamental ontological
question "what is network performance", the inclination, across the
industry, is to reach for a diagramme, that says the performance isn't my
problem, it's someone else's problem. Frustratingly or perhaps
conveniently, without ever actually explaining what performance is, you
will never identify the causes of performance problems. So the answer to
the customer remains, there is no problem, or if there is, it's not our
responsibility and there's nothing we can do about it.



It's your responsibility to ensure the customer can get what you're selling
them.



If the OP's customer can never ever get 20Mbps from anywhere, then I'd
think that is in breach of ACCC consumer guarantees, specifically, for a
Service,



   - be fit for the purpose or give the results that you and the business
   had agreed to



https://www.accc.gov.au/consumers/consumer-rights-
guarantees/consumer-guarantees







Kind regards

Paul Wilkins



On 5 December 2016 at 13:25, paul+ausnog at oxygennetworks.com.au <
paul+ausnog at oxygennetworks.com.au> wrote:

Hi All, many of us would be familiar with the complaints from customers
about not getting the speeds they pay for, this doesn’t really matter if
it’s ADSL, NBN, Ethernet, whatever really.



We have found that as with most people the average customer expects their
20M Ethernet connection to still deliver 20M from their test on
speedtest.net even when people are using it and consuming it, so I was
wondering if anybody has come across a diagram in their travels which
depicts the capacity of an Internet connection and shows data traversing
that so that we can give customers a visual representation of what is
actually happening on their connection when they do their speed test.



I have had a bit of a scour around already but can’t really find anything
which jumps out at me and helps me get this information across simply, you
know what they say, a picture tells a thousand words.



Regards

Paul



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