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21 sats \ 6 replies \ @k00b 21 Dec
I remember discussing QUIC around a decade ago as it pretty much replaces the core product the company I was working for at the time. "We need to keep our prices low because these big companies could just replace us with QUIC if they really wanted." It looks like it's nearly here.
The author of imquic links to this blog for getting more acquainted with QUIC.
@rblb not super related, but it reminds me a bit of our chat yesterday.
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19 sats \ 1 reply \ @brandonsbytes OP 21 Dec
what was the product that could easily get replaced with QUIC?
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @k00b 21 Dec
A reliable udp transport protocol that was baked into an scp-like command. It did a lot of what QUIC does.
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19 sats \ 3 replies \ @brandonsbytes OP 21 Dec
what was the chat about?
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21 sats \ 2 replies \ @k00b 21 Dec
websockets vs http
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @brandonsbytes OP 21 Dec
cool. But, QUIC is really a new transport right? Like an alternative to TCP. Websocket lives “inside”/“alongside” http at the application layer.
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @k00b 21 Dec
Websockets use http for the initial handshake, but are otherwise an independent application layer protocol.
QUIC is built on top of UDP and doesn't rely on TCP for handshakes or otherwise afaict.
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