IMO, QoS is a measure of how well your network operates while scalability is a feature of your network design. Therefore, you may have a scalable network of poor quality or a static network of high quality. I do not believe there is a direct relationship between the two.
IMO, QoS is a measure of how well your network operates while scalability is a feature of your network design. Therefore, you may have a scalable network of poor quality or a static network of high quality. I do not believe there is a direct relationship between the two.
As pointed out by the ITU-T Recommendation on August 1994, QoS is a broad term which can cover a single or combinatorial number of metrics. For example if connectivity is considered as the QoS metric then there is really no hard point of telling whether connectivity will increase or decrease with network scalability as that depends on the connection model, MAC protocol and interference management used in the system. The same applies on capacity, B.W, error rate. In summary, there is no unique answer as it depends on ur network setup.