On Thu, Oct 30, 2008 at 01:03:55PM +0000, HRH Sven Olaf Prinz von CyberBunker-Kamphuis MP wrote:
(the amsix with their many outages and connected parties that rely primarliy on it's functionality is a prime example here)
internet exchanges usually are some sort of hobby computer club, you cannot rely on them to actually -work-, but when they do work that's "nice" (always make sure you have enough paid capacity to cover for it when they do not work however!)
http://www.ams-ix.net/technical/stats/ certainly looks like over 500Gb/s of traffic across ams-ix. that's a big 'sort of hobby computer club'. i wonder what all those hobbiests are doing. in all seriousness, the above post is ludicrous. ams-ix runs one of the most reliable exchange platforms on the planet due to an incredible investment in optical switches and duplicate hardware. it's expensive to run that way but the results have been incredible. none of that is actually on-target for the original question about the *value* (other than cost savings) of peering. so far there have been some good values articulated and there may be more (reach, latency, diversity of path, diversity of capacity, control, flexibility, options, price negotation) and some additional costs have been mentioned (capex for peering routing, opex for the peering itself + cross connects + switch fees + additional time spent troubleshooting routing events). are there others?
Confidential: Please be advised that the information contained in this email message, including all attached documents or files, is privileged and confidential and is intended only for the use of the individual or individuals addressed. Any other use, dissemination, distribution or copying of this communication is strictly prohibited.
i was not an individual addressed but the attached mail was sent to a mailing list of 10k people. HRH Sven Olaf is in violation of his own policy about dissemination, distribution or copying. t. -- _____________________________________________________________________ todd underwood +1 603 643 9300 x101 renesys corporation todd@renesys.com http://www.renesys.com/blog