Back in 1987 some lads at Berkeley came up with RAID (redundant array of inexpensive disks). Mainframe hard drives were very expensive, and they figured out they could combine personal computer hard drives into an array, and make something both cheaper, faster and more reliable.
I did some maths over the weekend, and I've decided to coin the phrase, MAIL (Meraki array of inexpensive links).
Did you know if you combine independent low cost circuits with a low uptime you can end up with with an incredible uptime when combined with Meraki SDN?
For example, domestic fibre in my country typically has an advertised uptime of 99.99%. A 4G rural circuit (note - the second link needs to be something independent of the primary circuit) has an uptime of 99.9% (this is the worst case for rural users - urban users will observe much better numbers).
So if you combine those two the probability of them both failing at the same time is 0.0000001, which yields an uptime of 99.99999%. That is 7 nines! That equates to an access layer failure of just 3.2s per year.
Background maths:
99.99% uptime = downtime of 0.01% = probability of downtime of 0.0001
99.9% uptime = downtime of 0.1% = probability of downtime of 0.001
Probability of downtime = 0.0001 * 0.001 = 0.0000001
Consequently, probability of uptime = 1 - 0.0000001 = 0.9999999 = 99.99999%
Uptime of 99.99999 % = 3.2s per year of downtime