Use this valuation The value a buyer or seller places on bandwidth. Setting a valuation is part of setting a purchasing strategy. Valuation settings within a buyer agent let buyers specify the amount they are willing to pay for varying amounts of bandwidth. This information is used by the agent to respond to changing market conditions during a Merkato progressive second price auction. if you want to bid more aggressively for a certain amount of bandwidth The amount of data transmitted or received per unit of time. When we refer to acquiring or selling bandwidth, we mean the amount of information that can be sent over a connection at one time, at the allowed speed, without packet loss or excessive delay. Bandwidth is measured in bits-per-second., but progressively less aggressively for amounts above and below that amount. The Logarithmic valuation bids according to a formula where the maximum price offered for bandwidth occurs at a mid-point of the specified quantity, rather than at a maximum specified quantity.
The Logarithmic valuation applies a formula that corresponds to a curve on a graph. Setting the most bandwidth you could possibly want (maximum quantity, “Qty”) and a value you place on bandwidth (maximum value “Value”) creates the curve. The agent The program that interacts with the rest of Merkato on behalf of buyers and sellers. Buyers can acquire bandwidth by configuring their agents to offer the price they are willing to pay for a range of available quantity, or use their agent to request a quote for a fixed-price bandwidth reservation. Sellers configure their agents with a quantity of bandwidth for sale and a minimum price they are willing to accept for that quantity. bids based on the relationship of that curve to a third factor, the market rate. The agent reacts based on where the market rate intersects the curve on the graph.
You should set the maximum quantity based on one of two possible criteria:
Set the maximum value to correspond to the desired maximum cost. The maximum out-of-pocket cost will be approximately 37% of the value you set, as indicated by the graph to the left of the text entry fields. Continuing the previous example, if you are willing to pay up to $200 per Mbps (per month) for the 20 Mbps you desire, this is a total cost of $4,000 per month. The valuation you set is $4,000/0.37 = $10,811, as shown below.