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Lee, Could you also reply to the other part of my email? In particular: 1. What hardware are you using to collect your real-world V.34 statistics? 2. Are you sure this hardware actually implements V.8 fast handshaking? -Darren -- Darren Nickerson Senior Sales & Support Engineer iFax Solutions, Inc. www.ifax.com darren.nickerson@ifax.com +1.215.438.4638 office +1.215.243.8335 fax ----- Original Message ----- From: "Lee Howard" <faxguy@howardsilvan.com> To: "Darren Nickerson" <darren.nickerson@ifax.com> Cc: <jlewis@lewis.org>; <hylafax-users@hylafax.org> Sent: Saturday, August 23, 2003 7:39 PM Subject: Re: [hylafax-users] large multiport systems > On 2003.08.23 13:25 Darren Nickerson wrote: > > > > > > You're not up to date on deployment statistics ... V.34 is much > > more > > > > common > > > > than that. It's estimated that about 60% of all laser fax machines > > and > > > > 25% > > > > of inkjet models sold today are V.34 enabled. By 2005, as much as > > 75% > > > > of all > > > > laser fax machines and 50% of all inkjet fax machines sold will be > > > > V.34 > > > > enabled. > > > > > > In my experience V.8 handshaking (done with V.34 faxing) takes > > longer > > > than handshaking with non-V.34 faxing. And therefore V.34 only > > proves > > > beneficial if there is enough data to send that the increased > > bitrate > > > will compensate for the V.8 handshaking lag. Generally speaking a > > > one-page MMR-compressed page, such as this gentlemen is discussing, > > > will not contain enough data to make V.34 worthwhile. > > > > Lee, > > > > That has not been our experience, and it's a surprising observation > > since I > > think V.8's entire reason for existing is to make handshaking faster, > > not > > slower. > > Ah. I've miscommunicated. I didn't mean to imply any conclusion on > V.8 technology for a single call, but rather as a whole for single-page > bulk faxing. Allow me to restate... > > In my experience the total time consumed with handshaking for a group > of faxes to random, uncontrolled locations will take longer when using > V.8 handshaking (done with V.34 faxing) than if handshaking with > non-V.34 faxing were done. And therefore V.34 only proves beneficial > if there is enough total data to send among the group of faxes to > V.34-capable destinations that the increased bitrate will compensate > for the V.8 handshaking lag to non-V.34-capable destinations. > Generally speaking a one-page MMR-compressed page (all V.34-capable > receivers *should* support MMR due to the common ECM prerequisite > hurdle), such as this gentlemen is discussing, will not contain enough > data to make V.34 worthwhile. > > So, I don't mean to make a statement regarding how long handshaking > takes when a V.34-capable sender calls a V.34-capable receiver versus > how long handshaking takes when a non-V.34-capable sender calls a > non-V.34-capable receiver, but rather I mean to say that the total > "wasted" time trying to perform V.8 handshaking when a V.34-capable > sender calls non-V.34-capable receivers may not be less than the time > savings for those instances when the receivers are V.34-capable. > > When a V.34-capable sender calls it first tries to initiate V.8 > communication (required for all data communication speeds faster than > 14,400 bps). If that fails then it falls back to V.21. That fallback > takes some time. If the modem spends some seconds before falling back > to V.21, then in order for V.34 use to be worthwhile it needs to more > than "make up" those seconds with another call to a V.34 capable > receiver. Most V.34 connections aren't going to be at 33,600 bps, and > will probably average at 28,800 bps. So, more than 1800 bytes of data > will need to be sent at V.34 for every second wasted in failed V.8 > connection attempts. > > How long does a modem spend trying to do V.8? I don't know. Yes, it > probably varies from implementation to implementation; however, my > statement is to say that it takes *some* time. I don't pretend to know > the reason for V.8's entire existence. What I do know is that in my > experience there is more time consumed in attempting V.8 handshaking > with all destinations than is generally saved by V.34 data speeds to > those that do support it. Now, if the amount of data or the percentage > of V.34-capable receivers out there goes up, then the chances of V.34 > proving beneficial are increased. This should be true for *any* > implementation. > > V.34 communication should only be attempted with any single destination > if it is known to support it or if the amount of image data to send is > sufficient to make it worthwhile. Currently HylaFAX cannot make this > determination, unfortunately. > > Lee. > ____________________ HylaFAX(tm) Users Mailing List _______________________ To subscribe/unsubscribe, click http://lists.hylafax.org/cgi-bin/lsg2.cgi On UNIX: mail -s unsubscribe hylafax-users-request@hylafax.org < /dev/null *To learn about commercial HylaFAX(tm) support, mail sales@hylafax.org.*