Tens of millions of devices multiplied times a fairly large download = lots of bandwidth. It has an appreciable affect on the worldwide Internet. I would love to see some aggregate statistics. With most phones the carrier takes care of doing phone software updates and rollouts over a period of time since they all have customized versions of Android/Windows Phone/etc. Apple controls their phone software so they just hit the switch at a certain data/time and let as many people update as their servers can handle. Not to mention all the IPads which they chose to update at the same time. Last time around we saw a sustained increase in traffic for about a week after the release date. -Phil On 9/19/13 1:58 PM, "Paul Ferguson" <fergdawgster@mykolab.com> wrote:
Can someone please explain to a non-Apple person what the hell happened that started generating so much traffic? Perhaps I missed it in this thread, but I would be curious to know what iOS 7 implemented that caused this...
Thanks in adavnce,
- ferg
On 9/19/2013 10:23 AM, Nick Olsen wrote:
We also saw a huge spike in traffic. Still pretty high today as well. We saw a ~60% above average hit yesterday, And we're at ~20-30% above average today as well. Being an android user, It didn't dawn on me until some of the IOS users in the office started jumping up and down about IOS7 Nick Olsen Network Operations (855) FLSPEED x106
---------------------------------------- From: "Justin M. Streiner" <streiner@cluebyfour.org> Sent: Wednesday, September 18, 2013 6:19 PM To: "NANOG" <nanog@nanog.org> Subject: Re: iOS 7 update traffic
On Wed, 18 Sep 2013, Tassos Chatzithomaoglou wrote:
We also noticed an interesting spike (+ ~40%), mostly in akamai. The same happened on previous iOS too.
I see it here, too. At its peak, our traffic levels were roughly double what we would see on a normal weekday.
jms
Zachary McGibbon wrote on 18/9/2013 20:38:
So iOS 7 just came out, here's the spike in our graphs going to our ISP here at McGill, anyone else noticing a big spike?
[image: internet-sw1 - Traffic - Te0/7 - To Internet1-srp (IR Canet) - TenGigabitEthernet0/7]
Zachary McGibbon
-- Paul Ferguson Vice President, Threat Intelligence Internet Identity, Tacoma, Washington USA IID --> "Connect and Collaborate" --> www.internetidentity.com