Skip to main content
  • IETF Administration LLC 2026 Budget

    A draft budget was shared previously for community consultation and the IETF Administration LLC now has finalised its budget for 2026.

    28 Jan 2026
  • Agentic AI communications: Identifying the standards we need

    When it comes to standards work around agentic AI, we’re at an exciting threshold. As more tools emerge, we’re seeing the amazing things it can accomplish. Now, we’re trying to figure out what parts of it need to be standardized.

    22 Jan 2026
  • IETF@40

    Forty years ago today, 21 people gathered in San Diego, California for the first meeting of what became the Internet Engineering Task Force.

    16 Jan 2026
  • Launch of the IETF Community Survey 2025

    The IETF Community survey is our major annual survey of the whole of the IETF community and is used to inform the actions of IETF leadership throughout the year. The 2025 IETF Community Survey is live and we want to hear from you!

    23 Dec 2025
  • IETF Administration LLC 2026 Draft Budget

    The IETF Administration LLC has prepared its draft budget for 2026 and now seeks community feedback.

    19 Dec 2025

Filter by topic and date

Filter by topic and date

Bits-n-Bites at IETF 86

17 Mar 2013

I was asked to discuss some of the work that the IETF is doing with their Bits-N-Bites program, and some of the demos and lab work we did at IETF86 in Orlando this past week.

As we were preparing for the Orlando meeting, we talked about ways to make the Bits-N-Bites program more dynamic and provide a place for the IETF community to perform experimentation and get running code in a production like network setting. We shipped one of our Cable Modem Termination Systems (CMTS), which run on the Comcast production network down to Orlando and turned up a dual stack environment for demos and running code testing.

One example of this was the Homenet Working group running code examples based on the Homenet Architecture draft and the HIPnet draft. It was very exciting to see the collaboration between the many groups involved with setting up these Homenet demos, and great to see running code in action.

Bufferbloat demonstration at IETF 86 Bits-N-Bytes
Bufferbloat demonstration at IETF 86 Bits-N-Bytes

Another demonstration we performed live at Bits-N-Bites was an example of how to deal with a problem called Bufferbloat which is a problem discovered by Jim Gettys and worked on by a number of Open Source teams across the Internet. It was a very dynamic demo that showed the impact of bloated buffers on web performance and real time communication applications. We were able to show both bloated and dynamic buffer examples to the Bits-N-Bites audience, and it was well received. It was a great example of solving Internet scale problems with running code.

As we close up IETF 86 in Orlando, I hope that the IETF continues with the lab experiment we started here this week. It was great to see first hand examples of running code and teamwork that really energized the IETF community, which I think we need more of.

Thank you and I look forward to seeing everyone in Berlin for IETF 87.


Share this page