Well, connecting to an Internet backbone and having your own nationalwide backbone are two different things. It is even extremely difficult to define what is Internet backbone. Are MCI and Sprint connected to backbone? I think that not only they are, they also have their own DS3 backbone. Is company like Aimnet connected to backbone? Well, we have DS3s to PacBell NAP and MAE West, and of course think that we are connected to backbone although we do not have our own backbone. But we do not claim that we have Internet backbone. Hong Aimnet -------- Begin Included Message -------
At 10:32 AM 4/5/96, William Allen Simpson wrote:
From: Avi Freedman <freedman@netaxs.com> ... Everyone (of importance) agrees that in order to claim you're a backbone you have to (now, not a year ago) be connected to at least 2 public NAPs/MAEs and have at least one circuit that runs at DS3 or higher speed.
No, that is not correct.
A US Internet "backbone" is one which connects to ALL the NAP/MAEs in the US. Not just two. All of them.
Bill,
I'm not sure that's a viable definition. First, the number of MAE's seems to be increasing withou bound, and secondly, there are points that you don't want to connect due to their performance. Finally, is "connecting" considered the same as "peering"?
/John
-------- End Included Message --------