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When internet demand > supply?
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ZiNgA BuRgA
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When internet demand > supply?
Quote:Internet users face regular “brownouts” that will freeze their computers as capacity runs out in cyberspace, according to research to be published later this year.

Experts predict that consumer demand, already growing at 60 per cent a year, will start to exceed supply from as early as next year because of more people working online and the soaring popularity of bandwidth-hungry websites such as YouTube and services such as the BBC’s iPlayer.

It will initially lead to computers being disrupted and going offline for several minutes at a time. From 2012, however, PCs and laptops are likely to operate at a much reduced speed, rendering the internet an “unreliable toy”.

When Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the British scientist, wrote the code that transformed a private computer network into the world wide web in 1989, the internet appeared to be a limitless resource. However, a report being compiled by Nemertes Research, a respected American think-tank, will warn that the web has reached a critical point and that even the recession has failed to stave off impending problems.

“With more people working or looking for work from home, or using their PCs more for cheap entertainment, demand could double in 2009,” said Ted Ritter, a Nemertes analyst. “At best, wee see the [economic] slowdown delaying the fractures for maybe a year.”

In America, telecoms companies are spending £40 billion a year upgrading cables and supercomputers to increase capacity, while in Britain proposals to replace copper cabling across part of the network with fibreoptic wires would cost at least £5 billion.

Yet sites such as YouTube, the video-sharing service launched in 2005, which has exploded in popularity, can throw the most ambitious plans into disarray.

The amount of traffic generated each month by YouTube is now equivalent to the amount of traffic generated across the entire internet in all of 2000.

The extent of its popularity is indicated by the 100 million people who have logged on to the site to see the talent show contestant Susan Boyle in the past three weeks.

Another so-called “net bomb” being studied by Nemertes is BBC iPlayer, which allows viewers to watch high-definition television on their computers. In February there were more than 35 million requests for shows and iPlayer now accounts for 5 per cent of all UK internet traffic.

Analysts express such traffic in exabytes – a quintillion (or a million trillion) bytes or units of computer data. One exabyte is equivalent to 50,000 years’ worth of DVD-quality data.

Monthly traffic across the internet is running at about eight exabytes. A recent study by the University of Minnesota estimated that traffic was growing by at least 60 per cent a year, although that did not take into account plans for greater internet access in China and India.

While the net itself will ultimately survive, Ritter said that waves of disruption would begin to emerge next year, when computers would jitter and freeze. This would be followed by “brownouts” – a combination of temporary freezing and computers being reduced to a slow speed.

Ritter’s report will warn that an unreliable internet is merely a toy. “For business purposes, such as delivering medical records between hospitals in real time, it’s useless,” he said.

“Today people know how home computers slow down when the kids get back from school and start playing games, but by 2012 that traffic jam could last all day long.”

Engineers are already preparing for the worst. While some are planning a lightning-fast parallel network called “the grid”, others are building “caches”, private computer stations where popular entertainments are stored on local PCs rather than sent through the global backbone.

Telephone companies want to recoup escalating costs by increasing prices for “net hogs” who use more than their share of capacity.
- Source: [Times]

A bit dubious over this.  If demand goes up, won't prices follow?
30/04/2009 11:21 PM
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PLZDELETE
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RE: When internet demand > supply?
wait, i don't see how bad internet = freezing computers ?
30/04/2009 11:34 PM
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ZiNgA BuRgA
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RE: When internet demand > supply?
John_N Wrote:wait, i don't see how bad internet = freezing computers ?
Same here, though I guess it may be the case if you have specialised systems (ie medical systems which need to retrieve stuff from the internet).
30/04/2009 11:44 PM
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lembas
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RE: When internet demand > supply?
ZiNgA BuRgA Wrote:
Quote:The amount of traffic generated each month by YouTube is now equivalent to the amount of traffic generated across the entire internet in all of 2000.
holy spoon.

ZiNgA BuRgA Wrote:[quote]
“Today people know how home computers slow down when the kids get back from school and start playing games, but by 2012 that traffic jam could last all day long.”
playing games ≠ surfing the internet...

John_N Wrote:wait, i don't see how bad internet = freezing computers ?

yeah, I don't either.

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01/05/2009 01:19 AM
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PLZDELETE
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RE: When internet demand > supply?
ZiNgA BuRgA Wrote:
John_N Wrote:wait, i don't see how bad internet = freezing computers ?
Same here, though I guess it may be the case if you have specialised systems (ie medical systems which need to retrieve stuff from the internet).

well i would have thought they would have their own internet systems incase of problems
01/05/2009 01:32 AM
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ZiNgA BuRgA
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RE: When internet demand > supply?
John_N Wrote:
ZiNgA BuRgA Wrote:
John_N Wrote:wait, i don't see how bad internet = freezing computers ?
Same here, though I guess it may be the case if you have specialised systems (ie medical systems which need to retrieve stuff from the internet).

well i would have thought they would have their own internet systems incase of problems
Depends how critical something is.  If it's not so critical, it's cheaper to use an existing infrastructure than try to make your own :P
01/05/2009 01:37 AM
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Mr. Shizzy
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RE: When internet demand > supply?
Fascinating how fast the internet is growing.

However, I am doubtful that these "brownouts" will be a MAJOR problem in 2012...
Interesting read though.

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01/05/2009 06:20 AM
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bstronga
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RE: When internet demand > supply?
ZOMG 2012!!! the mayans were right! Frozesweat
01/05/2009 07:13 AM
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Jomann
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RE: When internet demand > supply?
Im experiencing this on counter strike, sometimes my connection freezes for a whole 3 seconds and it disconnects me but because the server doesn't detect it, it thinks im still on the server and I can't rejoin until about 5 minutes later.

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01/05/2009 10:06 AM
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|-Anubis-|
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RE: When internet demand > supply?
The last time the exaflood was predicted was during the last half of the 90s.

I don't remember anything like happening. :/

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01/05/2009 10:59 AM
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