nanog mailing list archives

Re: Internet Backbone Index


From: "Jack Rickard" <jack.rickard () boardwatch com>
Date: Fri, 27 Jun 1997 12:45:22 -0600

They could be.  The attempt is to factor that out.  ALL measuring agents
applied to ALL the backbones.  And all contributed more or less equally to
the end numbers.  If a particular agent ran on a Commodore 64 with a kluged
copy of KA9Q, and another agent ran on an Sun Solaris, both results would
go into the result pile for all 29 measured networks.   The net effect
would be that the flaw would be in our "footprint" from which the
measurements were taken.  This footprint can only be a rough approximation
of end user distribution anyway. It would affect absolute values relative
to zero, but the relative indexes between networks should not be affected. 
Since we're looking at the relative relationship primarily, it wouldn't
appear important.


Jack Rickard
----------
From: Stan Barber <sob () academ com>
To: Justin W. Newton <justin () priori net>; Larry Vaden <vaden () texoma net>;
Sean Donelan <SEAN () SDG DRA COM>; nanog () merit edu
Subject: Re: Internet Backbone Index
Date: Friday, June 27, 1997 1:54 PM

Justin writes:
ObAboutTopic:  This is possibly the most flawed study on the planet.
Remind me to get a fast web server.  (And to think, we were going to
put
our web server in our office, behind a T-1, instead of in real estate
near
where the real bandwidth is that could be used for customers.).  

There are many studies more flawed. Consider some of the studies that
the Tobacco Institute has released over the years about the affects of
smoking.

Concerning Internet performance, there have always been a variety of ways
of measuring it. It all depends on what you are really trying to measure.
The Keynote study is attempting to measure something to which the average

Internet user (not engineers) can relate.  However, There are also
clearly 
the possibility of artifacts in the data because of the testing machine's

TCP stack or other issues (Vern Paxson has covered these issues at NANOG 
and IETF meetings over the last few years). Checking their web site,
their 
software appears to run on top of the TCP stacks of many systems, so the 
known artifacts of some of these platforms could be an issue.

-- 
Stan   | Academ Consulting Services        |internet: sob () academ com
Olan   | For more info on academ, see this |uucp:
{mcsun|amdahl}!academ!sob
Barber | URL- http://www.academ.com/academ |Opinions expressed are only
mine.



Current thread: