The following text is copyright 1998 by
Network World, permission is hearby given for reproduction, as long as
attribution is given and this notice is included.
It’s a curve not a
point!
By Scott Bradner
The Internet is not good
enough, or so many people would have us believe. It does not have good enough
quality for IP telephony or for IP-based VPNs. It does not have good enough
security for remote access or for IP-based VPNs. It does not have enough reliability
for IP-based FAXs or EDI. All in all, if you listen to these pundits the
Internet does not seem to be of much use for anything real.
There is a common theme
to these pronouncements of uselessness. They assume that there is some point of
acceptability of a service. Since that has repeatedly been shown to not be the
case in the real world it is reasonable to wonder the real world understanding
of these pundits.
This is not a new
misunderstanding. A number of years ago one of the telephone company standards
groups did an exhaustive survey to determine the minimum quality that was
needed in the telephone system. This involved a lot of experiments and survey
work and is frequently sited as a landmark study of its type. (Though I've not
been able to track down a copy.) My problem with the work was what conclusions
were drawn from the effort. A point of acceptable quality was determined. This
misunderstands the dynamics of the marketplace.
For many years most
traditional telephone companies refused to invest in the infrastructure to
support cellular phones because the voice quality did not meet the acceptable
minimum and the assumption was that no one would want to use the service. It
was only after the frequency spectrum was opened up and new providers were able
to show that customers wanted the service that the main-line phone companies
moved.
The people who say that
the Internet is not good enough for one application or another are missing the
same detail that the phone companies did -- there is not a single point of
acceptability, it is a curve of quality vs. other factors. Other factors could
include convenience, as was the case with cell phones, cost, service coverage,
ease of use, and there are many more.
CNN ran a story on IP
telephony a week ago that interviewed someone who is using an IP telephony
service. This is a service where you dial the number of a local gateway from
your regular phone, the call is then routed over the Internet to a gateway near
the call destination where it is put back on the local phone network. He said
that there were a few problems with the quality but seemed quite happy with the
cost-quality tradeoff.
Note that the functions
available in the Internet for security, reliability and quality are changing
all the time so such tradeoffs are not static and should be reviewed over time.
You should look closely
at any pronouncement that a particular service can not be successfully run over
the Internet and see if there is a missing curve in the assumptions - remember
the cell phone.
disclaimer: Since
Harvard does not make pronouncements and this is one it must be my own.