Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

by Karl Bode




Quake Reminds Asia They Need More Tubes

from the capacity-strapped dept

With the serious disruption in fiber connectivity caused by the quakes in Asia this week, there's again the collective realization that yes, technology -- and in particular Internet connectivity -- can be fragile. Outages from the magnitude 6.7 quake off Taiwan's coast briefly rattled financial markets and communications in multiple countries. Though impacted markets saw positive trading for the day, the resulting mess renewed interest in the vulnerability of a global economy, leading to renewed calls for investment in Asia Pac fiber. While the U.S. remains the world's biggest traffic hub, managing 1.4 Tbps worth of bandwidth, Asia Pac connectivity was already ramping up. Many existing routes are now capacity strapped, lack redundancy, and not everyone can cram their traffic over the 320 GB/s Atlantic pipes connecting New York and London. Demand is driving a number of new links; a recent deal between India's Reliance Infocomm and China Telecom finally letting the two countries exchange data without using the U.S. as a hub. Verizon Business and a number of Asian companies also recently announced a new 11,000 mile, $500 million trans-pacific cable (1.28 terabits/second at first, 5 terabits later) that will stretch from Oregon to China, making stops in Tanshui, Taiwan, and Keoje, South Korea. As Senator Ted Stevens might say, Asia simply needs more tubes -- something companies were already working on before the earth began to shake.

8 Comments | Leave a Comment..

 
 

Reader Comments

(Flattened / Threaded)

    Dec 28th, 2006 @ 12:23pm
  • by Kyros

    Sweet, faster net for all. This will without doubt serve to boost the internet speed as a whole.

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

  • Dec 28th, 2006 @ 12:38pm
  • People are still feeling its effect. Slow to nil connection in some countries. It would take weeks before it will be restored. I felt the effect the whole afternoon. In the country I'm in right now, the Hongkong via China link was severed days before the earthquake. I think it's working now. I'm fortunate that we have 3 international uplink providers. It is said that by 2008 we're getting a new cable system. Perhaps that's the one in you're talking about.

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

  • Dec 28th, 2006 @ 1:08pm
  • Spam levels observed here down significantly

    by Rich Kulawiec

    This has been noted by others as well (see Brett Glass's note on Dave Farber's Interesting-People list) and it's probably an artifact of the
    mix of spam/non-spam mail we tend to get. (I'm measuring from
    sites in North America. The mix would be different if I were measuring
    from Brazil or Japan or Morocco.)

    Probably the single best thing that the folks on "the other side" of this
    outage could do to maximize the usable bandwidth would be to severely
    rate-limit anything connecting to port 25 that fingerprints as Windows.
    For an example of how to do this with OpenBSD, see:

    http://use.perl.org/~merlyn/journal/17094

    I suggest this because locally it's proved to be enormously useful; over
    99% of such connections seen in the last year have been zombies trying to deliver spam, so there's really no reason to let them hog bandwidth.
    (And the rest? They aren't denied service, they just get slower service.)

    Of course, the problem with this -- the BIG problem -- is that most of
    the networking gear in question probably doesn't have this ability.
    I suppose as a fallback that more basic traffic shaping (e.g. prioritize
    port 80 over port 25) might at least help provide a more responsive
    network experience.

    And in a throwback to a much earlier age of networking,
    I suppose it's not out of the question for a large site to tar up their
    mail queue, scribble it on removable media, and FedEx those to a site
    outside the affected region which un-tars them into an outbound queue.

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

    • Dec 28th, 2006 @ 1:42pm
    • Re: Spam levels observed here down significantly

      by todd

      i'm not agreeing or disputing anything said by Rich, but his last paragraph gave me a mental image of a FedEx guy on my front porch asking me to sign for my emails.

      thanks for the chuckle

      (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

    Dec 28th, 2006 @ 1:55pm
  • Dec 28th, 2006 @ 7:32pm
  • Did anyone notice?

    by dorpus

    Made no difference in Japan, and I was in internet cafes for much of the time too.

    (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

    • Dec 29th, 2006 @ 1:59am
    • Re: Did anyone notice?

      by Dorpus is a troll

      It made a huge difference in Tokyo from the financial market perspective as Reuters and Bloomberg was down. This had quite a huge impact on trades that day for most financial institutions.

      (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

      • Dec 29th, 2006 @ 3:28am
      • Re: Re: Did anyone notice?

        by Anonymous Coward

        Down? I had no trouble reading American news sites based on Reuters/Bloomberg.

        But you're right, the financial markets make their living from making mountains out of mole hills. When is the market going to crash again from a "terrorism warning"?

        (reply to this comment) (link to this comment)

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