Hey all,

I've been thinking about the impact that iCloud (by Apple) will have on the 
Internet.

My guess is that 99% of consumer internet access is Asymmetrical (DSL, Cable, 
wireless, etc) and iCloud when launched will 'upload' obscene amounts of gigs 
of music, tv, backups, email, photos, documents/data and so on to their data 
centres.

Now, don't misunderstand me, I love the concept of iCloud, as I do DropBox, but 
from an Access Providers perspective, I'm thinking this might be a 'bad thing'.

>From what I can see there are some key issues:

  *   Users with plans that count upload and download together.
  *   The speed of Asymmetric tail technology such as DSL
  *   The design of access provider backhaul (from DSLAM to core) metrics
  *   The design of some transit metrics

So basically the potential issue is that a large residential provider could 
have thousands of users connect to iCloud, their connections slowed because of 
uploading data, burning their included bandwidth caps, slowing down the 
backhaul segment of the network, and as residential providers are mostly 
download, some purchase transit from their upstreams in an symmetric fashion.

This post is really just to prompt discussion if people think there is anything 
to actually worry about, or there are other implications that I've not really 
thought of yet.

…Skeeve

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Skeeve Stevens, CEO - eintellego Pty Ltd - The Networking Specialists

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Phone: 1300 753 383 ; Fax: (+612) 8572 9954

Cell +61 (0)414 753 383 ; skype://skeeve

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