-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 At the time these statements were made it was possible to make reasonable assumptions about the size of the Internet. As a Tier 1 knew how much traffic our customer links generated by the size of the link. We knew exactly how much traffic stayed within our backbones and how much traffic ended up in a peering arrangement. We knew with some precision just how much of the Tier 2 ISP market was connected to us and how much was connected to others, and who the others were. I don't think the theory still holds but traffic on-net versus off-net was a pretty good indication of market share. Today's Internet handles much more traffic in-region and is bounded by phenomenon such as language barrier (although the amount of spam I get in Chinese characters has increased recently, who let the barrier down?). This phenomenon wasn't as prominent in '98-'01 and while I wouldn't say it's impossible I think you'd have to commission the folks at UCSD to get anything that resembled a value for total Internet capacity today. Doubling in 9-12 months was a reasonable figure back then. 100 days might have been a short-term spike caused by a back-log of activations (we sometimes stopped the machine while we made upgrades) but it certainly was an anomaly. jy On 10/08/2010, at 9:01 AM, Kenny Sallee wrote:
On Fri, Aug 6, 2010 at 2:52 PM, Jessica Yu <jyy_99@yahoo.com> wrote:
I do not know if making such distinction would alter the conclusion of your paper. But, to me, there is a difference between one to predict the growth of one particular network based on the stats collected than one to predict the growth of the entire Internet with no solid data. Thanks!--Jessica
Agree with Jessica: you can't say the 'Internet' doubles every x number of days/amount of time no matter what the number of days or amount of time is. The 'Internet' is a series of tubes...hahaha couldn't help it....As we all know the Internet is a bunch of providers plugged into each other. Provider A may see an 10x increase in traffic every month while provider B may not. For example, if Google makes a deal with Verizon only Verizon will see a huge increase in traffic internally and less externally (or vice versa). Until Google goes somewhere else! So the whole 'myth' of Internet doubling every 100 days to me is something someone (ODell it seems) made up to appease someone higher in the chain or a government committee that really doesn't get it. IE - it's marketing talk to quantify something. I guess if all the ISP's in the world provided a central repository bandwidth numbers they have on their backbone then you could make up some stats about Internet traffic as a whole. But without that - it just doesn't make much sense.
Just my .02 Kenny
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