Re: ASPs and Internet Congestion Analysis.
  Thread, the piece below is an article concerning an analysis from Peter Sevcik, an analyst for NCRI, which was posted on the NANOG List. It's titled: "Your Morning FUD." 
  FUD? or realistic observation and prediction? For the time being, I'll stick with the latter, agreeing with the analysis to a great extent, thinking that some breakaways might find private IP [or ATM] nets the way to go, going forward. And with breaking away from the larger 'net comes the introduction of proprietary fixes and lock ins, and the danger of isolation ,i.e., loss of ubiquitous reach, to some degree, unless additional layers of gateways and security are employed. 
  What do you think?
  Regards, Frank Coluccio ---------------------------from:
  news.excite.com
   SAN FRANCISCO -- Internet performance is too low to support  serious transactional business by ASPs, and trends indicate that  improvements may be inadequate over the next several years, a  recent study has found. 
   Northeast Consulting Resources Inc., of Boston, reports that the  growing complexity of Web pages and increased network delays will  reverse improvements in Internet performance built over the last  four years. 
   The findings are bad news for application service providers, which  promise to deliver enterprise resource planning and customer  relationship management applications. 
   "When the ASP applications come, the time of reckoning will  appear," Peter Sevcik, an analyst for NCRI, said earlier this month  at the 1999 Global Internet Performance Conference here. 
   Router runaround 
   NCRI says technology improvements have cut the average  download time of basic business Web pages from 12 seconds to 6  seconds since 1995, a significant drop despite a 120 percent increase  in page size. 
   However, those improvements may not be sustainable over the next  three years because overall delays within the Internet have become  significantly higher, due primarily to the increasing number of  routers. 
   More routers are added as sites deploy additional hardware to  provide more scalability. The increasing number of router hops  imposed upon data could deteriorate availability to about 9 seconds,  the study found. 
   NCRI based its study on data provided by Keynote Systems Inc., a  San Mateo, Calif., Web performance research company that  publishes the Keynote Business 40 Internet Performance Index, an  industry benchmark based on the performance and reliability of 40  leading business Web sites. 
   Keynote announced here at the conference the Keynote Consumer  40 Internet Performance Index, which will be based on the  performance of 40 consumer Web sites accessed through a 56K-bps  modem. 
   Indexes also will be available for digital subscriber line and cable  modems, and the whole package will be sold as the Keynote  Consumer Perspective service, which will be available later this  quarter, company officials said. 
   Pricing was not yet available.  |