06-21-2020, 01:43 AM
(This post was last modified: 06-21-2020, 01:45 AM by kaminskied@comcast.net.)
Because of the routing behavior of the internet latency can be highly propredictable between the same locations. In fact it is possible for a connection between Europe and the US to have fewer hops than a connection between two locations 100 miles apart. Sessions on JamKazam likely connect to a jamKazam hub and that point on the network is where each user is connecting.
Perhaps Jamkazam as a company would consider licensing the JamKazam server as a product, a product that could be installed at locations closer to the users in session. This distributed server licensed to a collection of users (for a fee) could improve performance because it would be dedicated to that user group with lower latency connections.
Has anyone proposed this concept... a concept that is typical in large global corporation networks.
Wondering
Perhaps Jamkazam as a company would consider licensing the JamKazam server as a product, a product that could be installed at locations closer to the users in session. This distributed server licensed to a collection of users (for a fee) could improve performance because it would be dedicated to that user group with lower latency connections.
Has anyone proposed this concept... a concept that is typical in large global corporation networks.
Wondering
(06-21-2020, 01:43 AM)kaminskied@comcast.net Wrote: Because of the routing behavior of the internet latency can be highly unpropredictable between the same locations. latecy is influced by routing In fact it is possible for a connection between Europe and the US to have fewer hops than a connection between two locations 100 miles apart. Sessions on JamKazam likely connect to a jamKazam hub and that point on the network is where each user is connecting.
Perhaps Jamkazam as a company would consider licensing the JamKazam server as a product, a product that could be installed at locations closer to the users in session. This distributed server licensed to a collection of users (for a fee) could improve performance because it would be dedicated to that user group with lower latency connections.
Has anyone proposed this concept... a concept that is typical in large global corporation networks.
Wondering
Ed Kaminski