On Thu, 10 Jul 1997, Gary Zimmerman wrote:
You talk about engineering good networks, why then use something that is unmanaged and uses poor technology and poor engineer designs in a MAE or NAP? Where is most of the packet lost on the internet? MAEs and NAPs.
This is gratutitous and misleading to the journalists and other non-network engineers here. The packet loss at NAPs and MAEs is caused by providers not upgrading the size or number of connections they have to/from the various exchange points they are experiencing problems at. An example of this disingenous usage of exchanges is Sprint's completely saturated T1 connection to CIX. There are many other examples. The solution is to not use those routes. If a provider is leaking bad routes and flaps continously, would you peer with them? Likewise, if a provider has a notoriously saturated connection to an exchange does it them become a (misleading) casebook example of why exchange points are bad? No and No. Mike. +------------------- H U R R I C A N E - E L E C T R I C -------------------+ | Mike Leber Direct Internet Connections Voice 408 282 1540 | | Hurricane Electric Web Hosting & Co-location Fax 408 971 3340 | | mleber@he.net http://www.he.net | +---------------------------------------------------------------------------+