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Cake day: June 7th, 2023

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  • non-moving home devices

    There still is a use case - not that common in America but very common in (not only Europe's) metropolitan areas:

    If the devices are located in a dense urban residential area (say Berlin Gropiusstadt in the 11th of 20 floors) you have a lot of neighbors with wifi, and - at least on 2.5GHz - roughly a third of their wifis will use the same or overlapping frequency range. In the evening, when everyone and her dog streams the newest Season of Bridgerton those will send relatively short bursts for buffering the next five-ish(?) minutes.

    This of course interferes with your measurement if you happen to measure at exactly the same time, so having multiple samples instead and providing an aggregated value is - for this scenario - more helpful.

    OTOH: it all depends on the use case of those appliances - if you don't have competitive gamers who wonder why they sometimes lag in your valued customer list, that's a non issue (and if they actual were competitive gamers, they should use an ethernet/fiber cable instead of wifi, obviously).

    And you probably did not get that much time allocated to add the delay, so going with another variant could get you in trouble if it's taking too long.