main

Christmas draws record Internet traffic

Daniel Fleshbourne   on 30 December 2003 - 15:38 · 8 comments & 1439 views

Advertisement (Why?)
It seems that bits and bytes are replacing Bedknobs and Broomsticks, with Britons flocking online in record numbers on Christmas day. Britons went online in unprecedented numbers this Christmas, with Internet traffic 50 percent up on last year. Internet traffic flowing through the London Internet Exchange (LINX), which handles more than 90 per cent of the UK’s Internet traffic, peaked at 25 Gbps on Boxing Day and at over 22 Gbps on Christmas Day itself. This is more than 50 per cent higher than the level of the same period last year, when the Boxing Day peak was 17 Gbps and the Christmas Day peak 15 Gbps.

LINX said that Christmas gifts and greetings, as well as routine business use of the Internet and the increasing internationalisation of the medium, all contributed to the rise in traffic. The rise in traffic should bring cheer to online retailers and put an end to those who said the end of the dot-com boom also meant an end to e-commerce.

This year's traffic was three times higher than that recorded during Christmas 2001, said LINX. Then, the flow of Internet traffic through LINX facilities peaked at around 9 Gbps on Boxing Day and 8 Gbps on Christmas Day -- so traffic this year is about three times the level of only two years ago. "The trend for Christmas traffic has reflected that of the past few weeks," said LINX sales and marketing manager Vanessa Evans, in a statement. "Traffic in November and December has been 50 per cent above the level of the same period in 2002. Growth has not been steady throughout the year, however, and the rate of increase over the few weeks prior to Christmas has been quite phenomenal while traffic levels over the summer remained relatively static."

News source: ZDNet UK


Dual-layer DVD-R products are slated to come out sometime next year, said Andy Parsons, senior vice president in the business solutions division of Pioneer Electronics USA. But he said dual-layer recording, no matter what the format, faces hurdles. One is the importance of fully recording both layers of a dual-layer disc, he said. If that doesn't occur, Parsons said, some DVD players might behave unpredictably, for instance by causing a momentary interruption of the program.

The dual-layer DVD+R specification does not require the entire disc to be recorded. Philips' Driessen said that if one layer of a dual-layer DVD+R has a recorded signal at a particular point on the disc, the other layer must have a matching signal; otherwise, a player may detect an error. For example, if one layer has 4GBs of data recorded, the other layer must have 4GB as well. But he said blank space may be left at the edge of the DVD without any playback problems.

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 8 additional comments
#1 i like chips on 30 Dec 2003 - 16:26
50% higher than last year?
#2 aldo on 30 Dec 2003 - 16:40
Wow. This will probably be accounted to the huge amount of people getting broadband now it is at an affordable level (some 50,000 people a week are getting DSL installed alone) and 1mbit products are starting to become affordable, which may result in the doubling of traffic levels.
(1 reply) #3 BrY on 30 Dec 2003 - 17:20
is britons people exclusive from britain? thanks just wondering
#3.1 TomAL on 30 Dec 2003 - 20:13
yep
#4 ripgut on 30 Dec 2003 - 17:53
well maybe cuz noone wanted to around the "family thing" that they jsut stayed online and gamed on urban terror
(2 replies) #5 jeff_beh on 30 Dec 2003 - 18:05
That's pretty crazy, I know an electronics store site in Canada that were receiving so much visitors their servers kept crashing, and they upgraded to a super good one (or so they say) already the night before!
#5.1 insurektion on 30 Dec 2003 - 20:25
futureshop?
#5.2 zivan56 on 31 Dec 2003 - 00:07
Yea, i think its future shop too.

Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!

Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.

Advertisement (Why?)