Thats a bit odd, because its based on the clients ip, not the dns ip. Otherwise I would also have problems with Microsoft downloads because they are also akamai based.
So this can not be the whole explanation.. On 31 December 2010 12:57:57 Soh Kam Yung wrote: > [ > http://apple.slashdot.org/story/10/12/31/0110226/Beware-of-Using-Google-Or > -Open-DNS-For-iTunes ] > [ http://joemaller.com/2577/itunes-slowdowns-with-google-dns/ ] > > Anybody else using Google or Open DNS and encountered a similar issue > with location based servers? > > ===== > Beware of Using Google Or Open DNS For iTunes on Thursday December 30, > @11:20PM Posted by timothy on Thursday December 30, @11:20PM > from the speak-friend-and-enter-slowly dept. > > Relayman writes "Joe Mailer wanted to download an iTunes movie > recently and his Apple TV told him it would take two hours. When he > switched his DNS resolver settings, the download time dropped to less > than 20 seconds. Apparently, iTunes content is served by Akamai which > uses geolocation based on the IP address of the DNS request to > determine which server should provide his content. When you use Google > or Open DNS to resolve the Apple domain name, all the requests to > Akamai appear to be coming from the same location and they're all > directed to the same server pool, overloading that pool and causing > the slow downloads. The solution: Be wary of using Google or Open DNS > when downloading iTunes files or similar large files. Use your own > ISPs DNS servers instead or run your own resolving DNS server." > ===== -- With regards, Mike Veltman A world with only one operating system, is a world without choice. _______________________________________________ LUGS Mailing list - [email protected] List FAQ: http://wiki.lugs.org.sg/LugsMailingListFaq Info page: http://www.lugs.org.sg/mailman/listinfo/slugnet To unsubscribe send an empty email to: [email protected]
