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Craig Partridge. ACK Spacing for High Delay-Bandwidth Paths with Insufficient Buffering, September 1998. InternetDraft draft-rfced-info-partridge-01.txt (work in progress).

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This paper is cited in the following contexts:
Transparent Proxy Signalling - Knutsson, Peterson (2001)   (Correct)

....palette of the image is reduced to reduce the transmission time. Yet another class of proxies are designed to improve various aspects of TCP. The Internet draft on Performance Enhancing Proxies [6] describes several such proxies, including relatively simple functions like TCP ACK Spacing [3] [23] (this proxy eliminates bursts of TCP data by smoothing out the flow of TCP ACKs) and TCP Snoop [4] this proxy hides packet drops on lossy links from the TCP sender to avoid wrongly triggering TCP congestion control) C. Benefits of Signalling We believe that most proxies, including both ....

C. Partridge. ACK spacing for high delay-bandwidth paths with insu#cient bu#ering. Internet-Draft (draft-rfced-info-partridge01. txt), September 1998.


TCP/IP for Wireless WANs - Montenegro (1999)   (Correct)

....and due to lack of sufficient buffering at the bottleneck router, packets may get dropped before the link s capacity is full. Spacing out the ACKs effectively controls the rate at which the sender will transmit into the network, and may result in little or no queueing at the bottleneck router [ACKSPACING]. 4.5 Delayed Duplicate Acknowlegements As was mentioned above, link layer retransmissions may raise the BER such that congestion accounts for most of the packet losses (still, nothing can be done about interruptions due to handoffs, moving beyond wireless coverage, etc) In this scenario, it is ....

Partridge, C., "ACK Spacing for High Delay-Bandwidth Paths with Insufficient Buffering, " September 1998. Internet-Draft draft-rfced-info-partridge-01.txt (work in progress).


Long Thin Wireless Networks - Montenegro, al.   (Correct)

....and due to lack of sufficient buffering at the bottleneck router, packets may get dropped before the link s capacity is full. Spacing out the ACKs effectively controls the rate at which the sender will transmit into the network, and may result in little or no queueing at the bottleneck router [ACKSPACING]. 4.5 Delayed Duplicate Acknowlegements As was mentioned above, link layer retransmissions may raise the BER such that congestion accounts for most of the packet losses (still, nothing can be done about interruptions due to handoffs, moving beyond wireless coverage, etc) In this scenario, it is ....

Partridge, C., "ACK Spacing for High Delay-Bandwidth Paths with Insufficient Buffering," July 1997. Internet-Draft draft-partridge-e2e-ackspacing-00.txt (work in progress).


Notes on Burst Mitigation for Transport Protocols - Mark Allman Icsi   (Correct)

No context found.

Craig Partridge. ACK Spacing for High Delay-Bandwidth Paths with Insufficient Buffering, September 1998. InternetDraft draft-rfced-info-partridge-01.txt (work in progress).


Notes on Burst Mitigation for Transport Protocols - Mark Allman Icsi (2004)   (Correct)

No context found.

Craig Partridge. ACK Spacing for High Delay-Bandwidth Paths with Insufficient Buffering, September 1998. InternetDraft draft-rfced-info-partridge-01.txt (work in progress).


Long Thin Networks - Montenegro, Dawkins, Kojo, Magret.. (2000)   (25 citations)  (Correct)

No context found.

Partridge, C., "ACK Spacing for High Delay-Bandwidth Paths with Insufficient Buffering", Work in Progress.


The Problem of End-to-end Security for Proxy-based Systems - Marius Portmann School (2000)   (Correct)

No context found.

C. Partridge, "ACK Spacing for High DelayBandwidth Paths with Insufficient Buffering", Internet Draft (draft-ietf-rfced-info-partridge01. txt), Work in progress, September 1998.

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