| > What exactly do you think would happen if everyone in town switched off and on their AC-powered devices at the same time? Large systems have their own rules. If everybody watches the superbowl at the same time I'd expect the power grid not to fail. If everybody gets home at around the same time from work and start powering on devices I'd expect power grid not to fail. If it suddently gets cold and people turn on heating around same time, I'd expect it not to fail. Those seem valid expectations and are met. Therefor when I say if everyone starts streaming netflix it should work, then this is also valid expectation and should be fine. > It is the level of service you paid for. The overbooking possibility? You paid for it, it was in your contract. I get what I pay for when I want. I have 1gbps, I can run full speed as much as I want and sometimes it's nice to do that. I am also in europe. I don't get throttled service and what you say is not in my contract. What do you say to that? |
> If everybody watches the superbowl at the same time I'd expect the power grid not to fail.
"I get what I want immediately" to "the system won't fail" is a nice way to shift goalposts. If everyone shows up to their flight then the flight won't crash, it'll depart just fine with the capacity it has and offer everyone else on the next available flight. You know, the same thing that happens when the power grid is turning back on. They do it one piece of the grid at a time. Which results in you getting less than what the person next door paid for. Because that's reality.
> I am also in europe. I don't get throttled service and what you say is not in my contract. What do you say to that?
When there are a ton of people crammed in the same location overloading the network, you get throttled, whether intentionality or not, whether you like it or not. There is no way on Earth that you being in Europe somehow makes you immune to reality.