Mother's day is the busiest day for the U.S. voice telephone network. The Friday after Thanksgiving is the busiest day for U.S. public libraries. U.S. electrical demand forecast increased 3% this summer compared to last year. The movie Titanic reach $600 million dollars domestic box office last weekend. The Internet has the September effect, maybe. Generally the previous numbers come from self-reported numbers from companies in the various industries. The NSFNET used to report total traffic growth. After the NSFNET was shutdown, the NAPs reported aggregate traffic at those points. Although there are obvious problems with any single point measurements of the Internet, they did give everyone a gross starting point. Much of our collective notion about the hyper-growth of the Internet came from these numbers. But if you look at the public numbers for Internet traffic, its still growing but at a slower rate. So what is going on? Internet growth has slowed. Internet growth is being constrained by some factor. If you add up the numbers at the NAPs, there is currently no single backbone in existence able to carry the entire Internet load. Even the new OC-48 networks announced by AGIS and Sprint are too small. Internet growth continues at its previous rate, but the public measurements no longer capture it. Do overall measurements of the Internet serve any useful purpose either for network engineering or investor information. Most other industries report various quantitative metrics on a regular basis. -- Sean Donelan, Data Research Associates, Inc, St. Louis, MO Affiliation given for identification not representation
Generally the previous numbers come from self-reported numbers from companies in the various industries. The NSFNET used to report total traffic growth. After the NSFNET was shutdown, the NAPs reported aggregate traffic at those points. Although there are obvious problems with any single point measurements of the Internet, they did give everyone a gross starting point. Much of our collective notion about the hyper-growth of the Internet came from these numbers. But if you look at the public numbers for Internet traffic, its still growing but at a slower rate.
Bandwidth at the public exchanges has slowed because the public exchanges cannot carry enough traffic given the number of ports needed. I suggest that bandwidth growth has continued because of a large increase in private peering. How much? You and I will never know. Given that the information about these interconnects is held as proprietary information under 50-100 different companies, we are not likely to ever know. We can only track the growth of our own companies bandwidth utilization, and plan accordingly.
Internet growth has slowed.
Not likely.
Internet growth is being constrained by some factor. If you add up the numbers at the NAPs, there is currently no single backbone in existence able to carry the entire Internet load. Even the new OC-48 networks announced by AGIS and Sprint are too small.
You missed Frontier Globalcenter in that list. Our OC48c IP backbone announcement was several weeks ago. :)
Internet growth continues at its previous rate, but the public measurements no longer capture it. Do overall measurements of the Internet serve any useful purpose either for network engineering or investor information. Most other industries report various quantitative metrics on a regular basis.
Yes, that's the ticket (the beginning of your message didn't lead into this). Overall traffic measurements would be very interesting, but not relevant to the needs inside owns own company. The amount of intra-network and inter-network bandwidth that is needed will vary from company to company, depending on business models, investment in sales and marketing, etc. etc. Dave -- Sr. Network Engineer Network Architecture Frontier GlobalCenter
At 02:45 PM 9/4/98 -0700, Dave Siegel wrote:
Generally the previous numbers come from self-reported numbers from companies in the various industries. The NSFNET used to report total traffic growth. After the NSFNET was shutdown, the NAPs reported aggregate traffic at those points.
For those of you who may be unfamiliar with a follow-on measurement with expanded scope and commercial network participation, please see http://www.caida.org --Steve G.
participants (3)
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Dave Siegel
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Sean Donelan
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Steve Goldstein