| Bailey, J., Internet economics, available at hhttp://far.mit.edu/Pubs/inet econ/abstract.htmli. |
....congestion from those which cannot. PMP would be easy to introduce. As with diff serv, it would not be necessary to wait for the deployment of IPv6 or other protocols. The current IPv4 packets already have a 3 bit priority field that is unused. It was used for only a brief period a decade ago [5, 2]. Since the number of channels in PMP is likely not to exceed 4, this is more than sufficient. Interoperability would be easy, as all packets that do not contain any bits indicating class of service could be sent on the lowest cost (and lowest priority) channel. At least initially, the cost per ....
Bailey, J., Internet economics, available at hhttp://far.mit.edu/Pubs/inet econ/abstract.htmli.
....congestion from those which cannot. PMP would be easy to introduce. As with diff serv, it would not be necessary to wait for the deployment of IPv6 or other protocols. The current IPv4 packets already have a 3 bit priority field that is unused. It was used for only a brief period a decade ago [BohnBCW, Bailey]. Since the number of channels in PMP is likely not to exceed 4, this is more than sufficient. Interoperability would be easy, as all packets that do not contain any bits indicating class of service could be sent on the lowest cost (and lowest priority) channel. At least initially, the cost per ....
J. Bailey, Internet economics, available at hhttp://far.mit.edu/Pubs/inet econ/abstract.htmli.
....anyway, and should therefore be more efficient. PMP would be easy to introduce. It would not be necessary to wait for the deployment of IPv6 [Huitema] or other protocols. The current IPv4 packets already have a 3 bit priority field that is unused. It was used for only a brief period a decade ago [BohnBCW, Bailey]. Since the number of networks in PMP is likely not to exceed 4, this is more than sufficient. Interoperability would be easy, as all packets that do not contain any bits indicating class of service could be sent on the lowest cost (and lowest priority) network. At least initially, the cost per ....
....forced to stop charging for individual email messages. 14 Large organizations also show a strong preference for flat rates. The introduction by the U. S. Defense Data Network of usage sensitive pricing resulted in the different branches of the U. S. armed forces building their own networks [Bailey]. This preference for flat rates is not unique to data networking. It is a general phenomenon that was probably first explored and documented in the context of pricing of local telephone calls in the Bell System in the 1970s [CosgroveL] In practice, what it means is that consumers are willing to ....
J. Bailey, Internet economics, available at hhttp://far.mit.edu/Pubs/inet econ/abstract.htmli.
Online articles have much greater impact More about CiteSeer.IST Add search form to your site Submit documents Feedback
CiteSeer.IST - Copyright Penn State and NEC