Kemaren aku lihat di MetroTV ada running teks , katanya Yahoo ma google
yang paling parah errornya ,, jadi susah diakses...
Kalo di channel tv laen , ini beritanya ...



http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_asiapacific/view/249375/1/.ht
ml
Undersea cables have the globe hardwired for communication
Posted: 27 December 2006 1633 hrs   
   

SYDNEY - The disruption to international telecom and Internet services
Wednesday caused by a strong earthquake in Taiwan highlight our
increasing dependence on high-tech cable systems across the world. 

The earthquake, measuring 7.1 on the Richter scale, hit southern Taiwan
hard late Tuesday and disturbed several of the massive submarine cables
running offshore which link countries in Asia with the United States and
beyond. 

Analysts said most international telecommunications are now carried by
submarine cable, forming a multi-billion dollar network that spans the
globe. 

Booming demand for increasingly sophisticated services is met by
continually adding capacity but as countless users found out on
Wednesday, they have become ever more dependent on a system which can be
vulnerable at certain key points. 

Independent telecommunications analyst Paul Budde said in a report
earlier this year that the first undersea cables were laid about 150
years ago to transmit telegrams and they have evolved to reflect
changing technology. 

The Australia-based analyst said it cost up to 500,000 US dollars a
kilometre (1,000 yards) to lay modern cables and recently, there had
been an increase in development of submarine infrastructure as demand
for broadband Internet and cheap telephone services increased. 

"Changes in undersea systems have taken place on a giant scale -- not
since the initial building of these networks 150 years ago have we seen
such activity, mainly driven by the increase in data traffic. 

"Systems that were built as late as 1998 proved to be inadequate for the
demand in capacity required a mere 18 months later. 

"Within a period of a few short years, there were ... at least 1,000
long-distance carriers and 10,000 ISP (Internet service providers)
requiring global connectivity," he said. 

The disruption Wednesday was widespread, hitting services in China,
Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore and Hong Kong, with knock-on
effects elsewhere. 




http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_asiapacific/view/249389/1/.ht
ml
Taiwan quake cuts off much of Asia Internet
Posted: 27 December 2006 1840 hrs 


HONG KONG - Internet and phone services were disrupted across much of
Asia on Wednesday after an earthquake damaged undersea cables, leaving
one of the world's most tech-savvy regions in a virtual blackout. 

>From frustrated traders seeking in vain for stock quotes to anxious
newshounds accustomed to round-the-clock updates on world events,
millions of people from China to Japan to Australia were affected. 

The disruption was widespread, hitting China, Japan, South Korea,
Taiwan, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Hong Kong and elsewhere, with
knock-on effects as far away as Australia for companies whose Internet
is routed through affected areas. 

There was no chaos on the stock exchanges or any of the other doomsday
scenarios, but reports that services could be down for weeks were
dramatic enough. 

South Korea's information and communication ministry said all six
undersea fibreoptic cables off Taiwan were hit, causing major
disruption. All services, except for exclusive business lines, returned
to normal shortly afterwards as they were switched to other systems. 

But officials could not put a timeframe on when business lines would be
fixed. "It is not a matter of days," said Hong Seoung-Yong, a ministry
official handling the problem. "It will take longer than that to repair
the damaged lines." 

A 7.1-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Taiwan on Tuesday night,
which was followed by several smaller quakes in the region, apparently
damaged the vast network of underwater cables that enables modern
communication. 

"The Internet capacity in Taiwan is about 40 percent now, so the service
is jammed," said a spokesman for Chunghwa Telecom, Taiwan's largest
phone company. 

A spokesman for CAT Telecom, Thailand's communication authority, said
Internet services had been disrupted across the country. 

"Those whose businesses mainly rely on Internet communication have been
affected. They can't do anything," he added. 

Phone services in some countries were also disrupted, in particular for
calls to the United States. 

"Several undersea data cables were damaged," said a spokesman for PCCW,
Hong Kong's biggest telecoms company. 

Service providers quickly tried to redirect customers to the cables that
had not been affected but the reduced capacity was no match for the
normal workload of users, leaving an Internet service that was painfully
slow or non-existent. 

"It's a nightmare, basically, because we have no idea what is going on
in the markets today," said Steve Rowles, an analyst with CFC Seymour in
Hong Kong, who echoed others in saying that damage was limited due to
year's end. 

"It has happened on the right day as a lot of people are away for
holidays, so there's low trading volumes," he said. 

In China, web users in cities as far apart as Beijing in the north and
Chongqing in the southwest reported difficulties accessing overseas
websites, state media reported, after several undersea cables belonging
to China Telecom were cut. 

The Tokyo Stock Exchange, the world's largest bourse outside of New
York, was functioning without problems, a spokesman said. 

The Hong Kong stock exchange also said it was also working without
problems, but after-hours crude trading in Singapore was affected as
traders reported they could not access the New York Mercantile Exchange
(Nymex). 

NTT Communications, the long-distance call business of Japan's largest
telecom firm Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp., said 1,400 toll-free
phone lines and 84 international lines used internally by companies were
affected. 

The crux of the trouble seemed to be in the underseas routes near
Taiwan, which providers would try to bypass in favour of other routes
through Europe, said a spokesman for Japanese telecoms firm KDDI Corp,
Satoru Ito. 

"If there is too much traffic on that route, it might get blocked up and
further slow down Internet connections," Ito said. - AFP /ls 

 
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