To be honest, I don't see this as a problem at all. Use it as an excuse to 
upgrade your pipes, talk Akamai or CDN of choice into putting a cache on your 
network, or implement your own caching solution. As operators of the Internet 
we should be looking for ways to enable things like this, not be up in arms at 
Apple for releasing an update to their phone OS or making it available in a way 
that's inconvenient to our oversubscription policies.

As a side note, how are some of you not aware of this? This has happened with 
every single Apple OS update since the iPhone was released in 2007. This isn't 
a new phenomenon. I realize some of you are too cool for Apple, but paying 
attention to traffic trends and keeping abreast of how new software releases 
might affect your utilization is part of properly running a network.

/Ryan

Ryan Harden
Senior Network Engineer
University of Chicago - AS160
P: 773-834-5441




On Sep 19, 2013, at 1:22 PM, Warren Bailey 
<[email protected]> wrote:

> I own a galaxy note 2..tmo ran an update that pushed to unique IMEI's 
> sequentially. That way, you do not..
> 
> 1. Murder your last mike packet network, which is your bandwidth bottleneck.
> 
> 2. Murder your ggsn/whateverpacketnodeyouwant closer to the core.
> 
> 3. Anger your paying customers who would like to use packet data successfully 
> on an ios download day.
> 
> These people (Apple) represent themselves as smart guys, but their actions 
> reflect otherwise. I bet this would be a larger deal to Nanog people if your 
> Internet stopped working as the result of 100% Linux adoption. That is very 
> close to what this is.. Tens of millions of people trying to update their 13 
> ios devices at the same time. Who owns a single ios device? A household could 
> do 5-10gb worth of updates in a single day..
> 
> I personally do not own an ios device, and I see close to 3 gigs worth of 
> update traffic at my house. These things are everywhere, and this problem 
> will not stop.
> 
> 
> Sent from my Mobile Device.
> 
> 
> -------- Original message --------
> From: Mikael Abrahamsson <[email protected]>
> Date: 09/19/2013 11:16 AM (GMT-08:00)
> To: Warren Bailey <[email protected]>
> Cc: Paul Ferguson <[email protected]>,NANOG <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: iOS 7 update traffic
> 
> 
> On Thu, 19 Sep 2013, Warren Bailey wrote:
> 
>> Why does apple feel it is okay to send every mobile device an update on a 
>> single day?
> 
> They don't, these are users who actively goes into the software upgrade
> menu and pressing "upgrade".
> 
> I believe the nagging won't start for quite some time.
> 
> --
> Mikael Abrahamsson    email: [email protected]

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: Message signed with OpenPGP using GPGMail

Reply via email to