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Re: Exchanges that matter...

  • From: Scott Huddle
  • Date: Wed Dec 04 18:09:30 1996

Alex, 

This is a very interesting statistic, and I'd like
to understand precisely what you mean by it.  

If you'ld allow me to restate it.  Do you mean that of all 
the traffic sourced to you from customers within the UK,
50% of that traffic is destined for other UK sites either 
to your own customers or exiting out an in country exchange 
point?

The remaining 50% of your traffic sourced within the UK
is destined for outside of the country, and of this 50%,
50% of that is destined for Linx, 40% to the US, and
10% to Stockholm.

Is this correct?

-scott
--

> From [email protected] Wed Dec  4 16:26 EST 1996
> X-Mailer: exmh 1.6.9 960923 ([email protected])
> To: Jim Dixon <[email protected]>
> cc: "Alex.Bligh" <[email protected]>, [email protected]
> Subject: Re: Exchanges that matter... 
> Mime-Version: 1.0
> Date: Wed, 04 Dec 1996 21:05:59 +0000
> From: "Alex.Bligh" <[email protected]>
> Sender: [email protected]
> Content-Type> : > text/plain> ; > charset=us-ascii> 
> Content-Length: 723
> 
> > On Wed, 4 Dec 1996, Alex.Bligh wrote:
> > 
> > > in content and in telecoms charging) perhaps. But ridiculous telco regulation
> > > within Europe and language differences makes a very strong case for at least
> > > one NAP per country (we dump about 50% of our UK traffic off in the UK).
> > 
> > What do you do with the other 50% of your UK traffic, Alex?
> 
> Country wise?
> 
> Difficult to divide up traffic sourced in the UK from traffic sourced
> outside teh UK just at the mo, but we send the vast majority of the
> rest to the states. I'd guess 50% to LINX (UK), 40% to US one way
> or another and 10% to Stockholm SE. The figures are not too easy to
> get as we are transitting US networks back to Europe too.
> 
> Alex Bligh
> Xara Networks
> 
> 
> 
> 
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