As much as the Autonomy decision has been touted as resolving issues of athlete welfare and rights, the heart of it is the centrifugal force that has separated the Power 5s from the rest of FBS. The final driving factors are money and control.
Clearly sooner rather than later, the focus is becoming the differences between schools/conferences on such issues as scheduling, four year scholarships, recruiting issues, payment of athletes, self-policing, etc.
I found this semi-satirical article from an Ole Miss grad funny, but harder for me to relate to.
Meet the Bag Man
If I had my way (with a nod towards the continual centrifugal force), I would execute a NFL-type of scheduling with a certain number of games within the division (read conference), games with a rotating division, and the rest weighted with last year's finish. More top 25 teams would play each other. Seeing more Top 10 teams from different conferences playing each other with preservation of rivalries would be good for college football.
Otherwise, there will always be an element of chest-thumping.
I wonder why the non-Power 5 teams don't band together and discuss items of common interest with guidance as how much buy-ins games will be worth, what their share of television revenue for away games should be, and establishing their own Council for governance.
Down the road, imagine there are no more conference bowl tie-ins and the top bowls outside the Playoff bowls will match up the best teams.