[49480] in North American Network Operators' Group
RE: Sprint peering policy
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Phil Rosenthal)
Mon Jul 1 21:55:09 2002
Reply-To: <pr@isprime.com>
From: "Phil Rosenthal" <pr@isprime.com>
To: <nanog@merit.edu>
Date: Mon, 1 Jul 2002 21:54:32 -0400
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.4.20.0207020115130.22093-100000@www.everquick.net>
Errors-To: owner-nanog-outgoing@merit.edu
My math shows ~500bps per US citizen:
Assuming 150,000,000,000 bits and 280,000,000 citizens.
--Phil
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu] On Behalf Of
E.B. Dreger
Sent: Monday, July 01, 2002 9:21 PM
To: nanog@merit.edu
Subject: Re: Sprint peering policy
RAS> Date: Mon, 1 Jul 2002 21:07:06 -0400
RAS> From: Richard A Steenbergen
RAS> If there is more than ~150Gbps of traffic total (counting the
RAS> traffic only once through the system) going through the US
RAS> backbones I'd be very surprised.
Oversimplifying the model, this works out to ~500 kbps per US citizen.
Allowing for burstiness, I offer 50 GB/mo transfer as conservative for
said bandwidth level. (I need to start pumping more traffic to catch up
to my personal fair share!)
Interesting point.
Eddy
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