Re: Halo 2 and broadband traffic

2004-12-12 Thread Petri Helenius
Bob Snyder wrote: And oddly enough, Sandvine offers a box that does this! :-) They're jumping on the press coverage of Halo 2 to try and raise awareness of their product line. Not that what's being said doesn't have merit, but it's definately a PR push, and definately not a End of the net

Halo 2 and broadband traffic

2004-12-08 Thread Fergie (Paul Ferguson)
Has anyone actually noticed any increases in residential broadband traffic due to Halo 2? - ferg http://news.com.com/Does%20the%20Halo%202%20effect%20threaten%20broadband/2100-1034_3-5481727.html -- Fergie, a.k.a. Paul Ferguson Engineering Architecture for the Internet [EMAIL PROTECTED

Re: Halo 2 and broadband traffic

2004-12-08 Thread Eric Gauthier
Overall, we typically move around 190/230bbps inbound/outbound from our campus Oops.. that should read 190/230Mbps... Eric :)

RE: Halo 2 and broadband traffic

2004-12-08 Thread Tom Easterday
At 4:27 PM + 12/8/04, Neil J. McRae wrote: I doubt Halo 2 would show anything on most stats as its relatively low bandwidth. In addition, there were (until Halo 2 came out) large numbers of users playing Halo 1 on mac/windows/xbox. Halo 2 is xbox only, and Halo one traffic has dropped off.

Re: Halo 2 and broadband traffic

2004-12-08 Thread Bob Snyder
On Wed, Dec 08, 2004 at 02:46:46PM +, Fergie (Paul Ferguson) wrote: Has anyone actually noticed any increases in residential broadband traffic due to Halo 2? This is lost in the noise of P2P traffic, which is the big bandwidth eater by far. I note that the story is essentially based

Re: Halo 2 and broadband traffic

2004-12-08 Thread Robert M. Enger
that are trying to avoid spending money on needed infrastructure improvements. (Why provide good service, when you can take the same money and try to buy Disney...) At 09:46 AM 12/8/2004, you wrote: Has anyone actually noticed any increases in residential broadband traffic due to Halo 2? - ferg