I sent this idea a while back, but I wonder if this might be a BOF topic? Modified based feedback : I spent a little time collecting experiences of people trying to convert in-person activities to remote using the internet. A common experience for many in the teacher/leader role is how to help their students/employees/members with their Internet connections. How can the IETF help? What standards are there already, or should be developed in IETF (if not, then where?) * "What is needed in order to do X remotely" Where "X" fits a small number of consumer categories ('office work" "watch HD movies" "document collaboration" "voice meeting" "video meeting" ) In terms of bandwidth, latency, jitter, dropout rate, etc. (as might be spec'd in a SLA) Such that it would be possible to build * an open-source test tool or reference implementation that is available for popular platforms (windows, mac, linux, ios, android) or run in the browser That one could download and run that would tell you Whether your connection met the standard for various categories. * An aspirational goal, to include useful hints / diagnostics / data about what you could do to improve (e.g. detect bufferbloat) or policy problems (such: "violates personal firewall policy X", "violates corporate security policy Y", "requires more bandwidth than policy allows", "attempts to connect to sites/countries banned by policy") * should be usable as a metric for use in broadband access plans for universal access > > > Some Internet games have meters, there's speedtest which is mostly > > "bandwidth" There are some kinds of uses that need guaranteed low > > latency There are standards for video quality (ITU J-341 and Netflix VMAF