nanog mailing list archives

RE: sprint passes uu?


From: "Shawn Solomon" <ssolomon () ind net>
Date: Wed, 16 Oct 2002 09:18:21 -0500


I'm curious to know how many of those UU customers are just waiting for
their contracts to expire before giving them the big F.U.


-----Original Message-----
From: Richard A Steenbergen [mailto:ras () e-gerbil net] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 15, 2002 7:09 PM
To: jlewis () lewis org
Cc: Brian; nanog () merit edu
Subject: Re: sprint passes uu?


On Tue, Oct 15, 2002 at 07:25:15PM -0400, jlewis () lewis org wrote:

It's hard to know how large a percentage though without knowing how
many
Sprint customers are also UU customers.  i.e. The combination of
Sprint
and UU customer routes could still be just 47637 prefixes, though I'm
sure
it's somewhere between that and 47637+45410.  It's certainly not
47637+45410, which would falsely suggest that together Sprint and UU
have
roughly 80% of the internet as customers.

Well, just by checking the "big" providers off the top of my head, I
come
up with:

ASN             Routes          Common Name
----            ------          -----------
1239             47711          Sprint
701              45429          UU
3561             23205          CW
7018             23154          AT&T
1                20231          BBN/Genuity
209              17082          Qwest
3356             12587          Level 3
3549             12175          GBLX
6453             10403          Teleglobe
2914              8791          Verio
6461              8089          MFN/AboveNet
4200              7506          Aleron/Agis
1299              6773          Telia
5511              4261          OpenTransit
4637              4066          Reach
16631             2067          Cogent
2828              1842          XO
4006              1727          NetRail/Cogent
                 -----
                256984

Which of course ignores many dozens of 1-2k route providers.

Now, of course number of routes has absolutily nothing to do with amount
of traffic (ex: AOL, which anounces 400 some routes (and a lot of those
are RoadRunner) but is one of if not the single the most important sink
of traffic in the world), but it's interesting nevertheless.

-- 
Richard A Steenbergen <ras () e-gerbil net>
http://www.e-gerbil.net/ras
PGP Key ID: 0x138EA177  (67 29 D7 BC E8 18 3E DA  B2 46 B3 D8 14 36 FE
B6)


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