----- Original Message -----
From: "Sam Hartman" <hartmans-ietf(_at_)mit(_dot_)edu>
To: "Mary Barnes" <mary(_dot_)ietf(_dot_)barnes(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com>
Cc: "Sam Hartman" <hartmans-ietf(_at_)mit(_dot_)edu>; "IETF"
<ietf(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org>
Sent: Monday, March 04, 2013 8:26 PM
"Mary" == Mary Barnes
<mary(_dot_)ietf(_dot_)barnes(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com> writes:
Mary> And, I continue to support Sam's position as well. To me
the
Mary> question at hand is whether it will do more harm to fill the
Mary> position with someone that doesn't have the specific
expertise
Mary> that his being sought than to leave the position unfilled.
Mary> Having dealt with the exact same issue when I was Nomcom
Mary> chair, I thoroughly understand the issue at hand. And,
Mary> certainly, there was a lot of criticism of the choice of the
Mary> Nomcom I chaired, but we really are between a rock and a
hard
Mary> place yet again.
I think it would be really useful to get someone like Lars or the
chair
of the tcpm working group to comment on how much congestion control
experience we're talking about as a requirement.
Not much, based on my experience:-(
The I-Ds I have been closely involved with have typically drawn DISCUSS
from Security and Transport and while those from Security have usually
given me pause, enlightened me, made me do my homework, those for
Transport seem to be saying that you must not give any encouragement to
the use of UDP and nothing more than that. I do track TCPM and ICCRG
and have some insight into the sophistication of modern control
mechanisms, but outside those groups, the application of congestion
control seems basic; TCP and its (friendly) derivatives OK, anything
else not OK.
Tom Petch
When I read Lars's messages, I'm not actually sure he and I are
disagreeing.
There's a lot of things it could mean for the IESG to have congestion
control expertise.