[26509] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: Traffic statistics from major ISPs
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Steve Feldman)
Sat Jan 1 23:50:13 2000
Date: Sat, 1 Jan 2000 20:49:00 -0800
From: Steve Feldman <feldman@mci.net>
To: Sean Donelan <sean@donelan.com>
Cc: nanog@merit.edu
Message-ID: <20000101204859.A40665@mci.net>
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In-Reply-To: <20000102021225.24906.cpmta@c004.sfo.cp.net>; from Sean Donelan on Sat, Jan 01, 2000 at 06:12:25PM -0800
Errors-To: owner-nanog-outgoing@merit.edu
Not exactly what you asked for, but there are (finally!)
useful MAE East stats again. http://www.mae.net/east/stats.html
It shows a minor but noticeable dip in traffic from about
23:45 to 00:30 Eastern time last night. This was also observed
at MAE West and the ATM MAEs. I didn't observe any other artifacts
as the new year moved west.
Steve
On Sat, Jan 01, 2000 at 06:12:25PM -0800, Sean Donelan wrote:
>
> In the voice world, AT&T, SBC, Bell Atlantic and others have released
> traffic figures about how many voice calls they handled around New
> Year's.
>
> I have not seen similar data from any major ISPs about traffic volume
> around New Year's. I know about third-party sites such as Keynote, and
> MIDS; but they don't measure traffic volume. I'm looking for basic
> data such as ANS used to publish for the NSFNET. The closest I've found
> is Abovenet's MRTG pages, but it is spread out over different links and
> its hard to aggregate the numbers without double counting, or undercounting.
>
> I know several major ISPs collect the data internally, but haven't
> released it like the voice side of the house.
>
>
>