Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by roamingryan 2046 days ago
It is also worth noting that propagation velocity in glass fiber is about 60% slower than free space. Once the constellation is dense enough and OISLs are working, they'll be able to undercut fiber latency. That is, if they actually decide to route signals in a purely latency-optimized manner. I wouldn't be at all surprised to see some sort of tiered pricing related to latency and latency jitter.

No doubt the scummy high frequency traders are already jockeying to get out in front of this change in the telecom industry.

4 comments

What would be the use case for hft? I assume this would be slower than any existing microwave networks, or whatever is fastest right now. Cities that for whatever reason can’t be connected via microwave like nyc-London? I’m aware this possibly/probably reads like amateur hour to anyone actually in the hft biz...
Yes, routes like NYC-London or London-Johannesburg. http://web.archive.org/web/20200819084001/http://nrg.cs.ucl....
Show me the microwave network that runs transoceanic
I'm on the East Coast. If I put my microwave on medium and rig the door open, I can nuke a burrito from across the room. I figure if it was on high, I might just make it to London.
Earth isn't flat.
Another consideration apart from my other response is cumulative flatness: Over any sufficiently short distance, let's call it X, that portion of the earth is indistinguishable from "flat" While the distance X[1] + X[2] might begin to exhibit a degree of curvature, you can take the distance between the midpoint of X[1] and X[2] and come up the same distance X, thereby bridging the very minor curvature of X[1] + X[2] with a span of flatness. In this way, any arbitrarily long distance can be treated as flat by chaining together the successive midpoints of X[1...N].

This is the theory of Non-Intuitive Cumulative Flatness (NICF) and is indeed rather ground breaking. The rugged persistence of flat-earthers over the years demonstrates that their claims must have some validity, and yet every last bit of empirical evidence refutes their viewpoint. NICF offers a unified theory of flat-curved earth geometry, much the same way that science has tried to bridge the gap between general relativity & quantum physics, to bridge these two contradictory theories and thus, demonstrate the earth to be both curved & flat.

Methods & applications that may take advantage of both geometries are currently underway. Most notably, finding the edge of the flat geometry would allow launching of space vehicles under significantly lower escape velocities, at which point the vehicle could transition to the curve geometry.

Softbank is highly interested, and a > $1billion funding round may be closing shortly after a successful MVP demonstration using a highly modded version of Kerbal Space Program.

I hope this is a joke, but I really don't know anymore.
I also have a hand-held power drill, so a direct tunnel isn't out of the question.
I think your number is wrong right? Fiber should be 60% OF the speed of light, not 60% slower, so like 180km/s instead of 300km/s.
since we're being pedantic about fractions, I should point out that your figure for c is off by about three orders of magnitude.
every increasing tiering of pricing for different service models is 100% how I expect this story to go.

I think it might remain a pretty ok option for some, but this is definitely going to become a way to pay hella beans for your preferred non-neutral network providing.

Aren't the major HFTs in some cases just a few blocks away already?
HFT is arbitrage. The ask in Chicago falls below the bid in New York, so you buy for $12.25 in Chicago and sell for $12.27 in New York until there is either nobody willing to sell for $12.25 in Chicago or nobody willing to pay $12.27 in New York anymore. Which happens almost immediately, so whoever is fastest gets the money.

That means you want to be sitting right on both of the exchanges, but also that you want the fastest possible link between New York and Chicago.

Its for the people doing trades between exchanges (eg: New York to London) that this will benefit as they can act on the movement of another exchange before anyone else can. There is at least one microwave link between Chicago and New York to do this as the speed of light in air is faster than in glass.