37 votes

A new internet standard called L4S could significantly lower the amount of time we spend waiting for things to load

3 comments

  1. [3]
    drannex
    Link
    L4S is a traffic controller, makes sense. Cool.

    L4S stands for Low Latency, Low Loss, Scalable Throughput, and its goal is to make sure your packets spend as little time needlessly waiting in line as possible by reducing the need for queuing. To do this, it works on making the latency feedback loop shorter; when congestion starts happening, L4S means your devices find out about it almost immediately and can start doing something to fix the problem. Usually, that means backing off slightly on how much data they’re sending.

    The L4S standard adds an indicator to packets, which says whether they experienced congestion on their journey from one device to another. If they sail right on through, there’s no problem, and nothing happens. But if they have to wait in a queue for more than a specified amount of time, they get marked as having experienced congestion. That way, the devices can start making adjustments immediately to keep the congestion from getting worse and to potentially eliminate it altogether. That keeps the data flowing as fast as it possibly can and gets rid of the disruptions and mitigations that can add latency with other systems.

    L4S is a traffic controller, makes sense. Cool.

    14 votes
    1. [2]
      Sodliddesu
      Link Parent
      They skipped acronymizing the Throughput because they didn't want to be L4ST.

      They skipped acronymizing the Throughput because they didn't want to be L4ST.

      21 votes
      1. [2]
        Comment deleted by author
        Link Parent
        1. adutchman
          Link Parent
          Or "L4st: now more lost packets"

          Or "L4st: now more lost packets"