I hope many of you saw this near- real-time. It was awsome. Roy Mark writes for internetnews.com: [snip] Deep Impact's spectacular collision with the comet Tempel 1 resulted in an explosion of record traffic to the NASA Web site to see how it looked. The hyper-speed demise of the ship's probe, as it smashed into a comet half the size of Manhattan, generated approximately 80 million page views. "It's off the scale," Brian Dunbar, NASA's Internet Services Manager, told internetnews.com, noting the previous traffic record was 30 million page views for the Mars landing in 2004. "Hands down, it was a record day." [snip] http://www.internetnews.com/xSP/article.php/3517721 Pretty cool stuff. :-) - ferg ps. We should also be aware of how far AOL has come, too, since the 1996 Victoria's Secret fashion show. From every report, they pulled off streaming 7 simulateous video feeds of the Live 8 concerts this past weekend without any substantial problems whatsoever. http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050705/ap_en_bu/internet_video_performs Time they are a'changin'. -- "Fergie", a.k.a. Paul Ferguson Engineering Architecture for the Internet fergdawg@netzero.net or fergdawg@sbcglobal.net ferg's tech blog: http://fergdawg.blogspot.com/