While TAIT may be interesting on its own, I do not think TAIT "solves" boxing.
When using `AsyncIterator` as a generic parameter, the exact type of the returned future (and its size) is known at compile-time. Things are great.
The problem occurs when using a `dyn AsyncIterator`, base on the (unknown) implementation, the exact type of the return future (and its size) varies. This in turn means that it's not possible to know how much space to reserve on the stack, or in the implicitly generated generator (where it may live as a field).