Hi!

I know its against list policy to forward messages but I think this message I 
received from a friend of mine who works for one of Australia's big Mobile 
company's to be extremely important for all list members who wish to update 
their IOS devices,, this chap - who just happens to be totally blind - is a 
mobile engineer with the company who gets hold of first-hand information on 
Iphone etc.



Begin forwarded message:

>  
> Owners of an iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch and Apple TV were yesterday able to 
> update their devices to Apple’s new iOS 5 software, providing them with a 
> number of new features and access to the company’s new cloud service iCloud. 
> Update below.
>  
> Apple experienced problems of its own, with many users unable to update their 
> devices because its servers were unable to cope with requests to activate 
> their installs, pulling an “internal error occurred (3200)” message each time 
> they attempted to install the update.
>  
> It appears that whilst Apple stuggled to cope with demand, ISPs were facing 
> issues trying to keep traffic flowing through their networks, as Apple device 
> owners attempted to download at least 600 megabyte updates.
>  
> One ISP, AAISP, was “caught unawares” and yesterday evening saw “silly high 
> usage since around 18:40 [BST]” leading them to think that “something [was] 
> clearly ‘up’ and there [was] some ‘internet event’ happening”.
>  
> As Cult of Mac notes, that “internet event” was the release of iOS 5, Mac OS 
> X 10.7.2 and a number of new applications.
> Throughout the evening, AAISP engineers posted on the company’s Incident and 
> Status Page, noting just what was happening to its network as subscribers 
> fired up their iTunes clients and updated their iOS devices:
>  
> At 8.53pm, they wrote:
> This is worse than the world cup traffic!
>  
> Two minutes later:
> Only clue is new Apple IOS5 stuff – if that is the cause I am impressed.
>  
> At 8:57pm:
> Usage has just reached unprecidented levels – we have not seen anothing like 
> this…
> The team then saw that issues were being reported on other UK ISPs, forcing 
> them to increase their core link to maximum output to cope with demand. The 
> company was forced get its FireBrick team working hard to scale its CPU 
> output and loads to cope with “unprecidented levels of usage”, something that 
> could have failed users should it not have been adequately managed.
>  
> They also exclaimed that they knew that there was a Windows Update and 
> Apple’s iOS 5 release, but didn’t believe that could have been just those 
> updates.
>  
> However at 8:45am this morning, AAISP engineers confirmed that suspicion:
> We are guessing this was IOS5 release.
>  
> TNW contributor Steve Kennedy noticed the spike at a London broadband 
> exchange, sharing a graph of the traffic boost at the time:
> The traffic at the LONAP (LONAP is a London Neutral Internet Exchange Point 
> where Internet and content providers exchange traffic) increased from a 
> normal peak of around 18Gb/s to around 28Gb/s.
>  
> This was just in the UK but will have almost certainly been mirrored across 
> the world.
>  
> Did Apple break the Internet? Probably not. It just gave some ISP engineers a 
> bit of a scare.
>  
> Update: Andy Davidson, the Director of LONAP, gave us this statement about 
> the traffic:
> The traffic was around twice what we would see on a typical Wednesday 
> evening.  There was as much traffic as we would see for a major sporting 
> event (such as England playing in the World or European cups).  Such volumes 
> have never been seen before for a software upgrade.
> Sean McGerty  |  Architect  | Converged Architecture & Design  |  Mobile & 
> Converged Service Engineering  |  Optus Networks  |  1 Lyonpark Road, 
> Macquarie Park NSW 2113  |   t: +61 2 8082 1258
> **** DISCLAIMER ****
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> recipient, please notify the sender immediately and delete this e-mail from 
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> or omission free.
> QP Please think of the environment before printing this email

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