HTTP/3 just abandoned TCP and TLS

HTTP/3 just abandoned TCP and TLS

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ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-quic-transport-34.html#section-12
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QUIC is better in every way

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How does it check packet integrity over udp

It's handled by QUIC. All it does it move the functionality out of the kernel to user space.

this also means uniform protocol fingerprint across every OS

ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-quic-transport-34.html#section-12

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wtf what do I have to do exactly to be able to understand a sentence like this

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Reminder that the normal way to create a standard is:
>find a problem in need of a solution
>devise a solution
>think of all the use cases and edge cases you can
>write a proposal, put it out for comments
>revise it based on comments, repeat until its satisfactory
>submit it to standards body
>promote it
>leave it the fuck alone, it's a standard
Yet Google's process is
>find a solution in need of a problem
>think of problems it can solve
>write a proposal, submit it to standards body
>promote it
>act surprised when everyone has comments and complaints
>revise it, depreciate the standard you just made, repeat

Study Computer Science, networking, or be interested enough in networking to learn about this stuff by yourself

A non-retard.

kys

Retard. QUIC is better in everyway.

No, seriously, you just have to be willing to google the words you don't understand and take a few minutes to read what they are.

I'm not denying that it is. Many Google standards are pretty good. I'm just saying give it a few years and just as everyone is beginning to adopt it, Google will announce a new replacement and deprecate it.

ik what they mean but i dont understand what is the point of the sentence

when did ipv6 come out? a billion years ago?
if its not js the web is simply not interested

Any chrome-based browser already supports QUIC.

Networking

Yeah, practically everyone's computers already support ipv6 too. That doesn't mean many people use it unless their ISP forces them to.

You're retarded. Browsers are already using it when possible. Unlike IPv6 this doesn't require major infrastructure changes across every single network. Also for a monkey like you that only cares about JS this means nothing since it'll have no bearing on you. Don't worry retard and stop pissing in something you know nothing about.

Yet servers aren't picking it up very quickly.

Kill yourself retard

Oh, I'm sorry. I didn't realize you're a shill. Carry on then.

15 year process for obsolete-out-of-the-box software vs google way