nanog mailing list archives

RE: wow, lots of akamai


From: Luke Guillory <LGuillory () reservetele com>
Date: Thu, 1 Apr 2021 20:09:24 +0000

IX’s don’t really help the source doesn’t use them.

Akamai traffic.
17G via Local Cache
17G via Transit
8G via IXs.

Plenty of room on IXs for more on our side.



From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+lguillory=reservetele.com () nanog org> On Behalf Of Mike Hammett
Sent: Thursday, April 1, 2021 2:31 PM
To: Niels Bakker <niels=nanog () bakker net>
Cc: nanog () nanog org
Subject: Re: wow, lots of akamai

*External Email: Use Caution*
There likely is some amount of time between the product being "done" and the activation date. That time could be used 
(and may very well be for some platforms) to distribute the content ahead of when people need it. If too many points of 
congestion arise, the above mentioned time would need to be longer.


Of course as an IX operator, I encourage everyone (CDNs and eyeballs) to join IXes and push them bits at maximum speed! 
 ;-)


As an eyeball ISP, sometimes the congestion is in the home, creating a poor experience, yet no one above them is to 
blame.




-----
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
https://link.edgepilot.com/s/ac964af3/CIKwQEO-ZkiYpW6Z8sKObQ?u=http://www.ics-il.com/

Midwest-IX
https://link.edgepilot.com/s/aac6d8b8/o8NzA_6ZJESKpzRLQOS0Pw?u=http://www.midwest-ix.com/

________________________________
From: "Niels Bakker" <niels=nanog () bakker net<mailto:niels=nanog () bakker net>>
To: nanog () nanog org<mailto:nanog () nanog org>
Sent: Thursday, April 1, 2021 2:21:24 PM
Subject: Re: wow, lots of akamai

* nanog () nanog org<mailto:nanog () nanog org> (Jean St-Laurent via NANOG) [Thu 01 Apr 2021, 21:03 CEST]:
An artificial roll out penalty somehow? Probably not at the ISP
level, but more at the game level. Well, ISP could also have some
mechanisms to reduce the impact or even Akamai could force a
progressive roll out.

It's an online game. You can't play the game with outdated assets.
You'd not see walls where other players would, for example.

What you're suggesting is the ability of ISPs to market Internet access
at a certain speed but not have to deliver it based on conditions they
create.


        -- Niels.



Links contained in this email have been replaced. If you click on a link in the email above, the link will be analyzed 
for known threats. If a known threat is found, you will not be able to proceed to the destination. If suspicious 
content is detected, you will see a warning.

Current thread: