Weighing the Internet 144
the-dark-kangaroo writes "Jason Striegel has taken Physics to a new dimension by 'Weighing the Internet.' Well, actually calculating the total number of users online in one day. The conclusion that was reached was that there are ~519 million users per day online. Also, 'From what we calculated, it would appear that roughly 41 percent of internet users did not log in that day.'"
what? (Score:2, Insightful)
what?
Re:what? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:what? (Score:1)
Cabling (Score:2, Troll)
-M
Re:Cabling (Score:1)
Re:Cabling (Score:1)
Re:what? (Score:2, Funny)
Although most people consider light to be the fastest thing there is, heavy is indeed faster but it takes longer to get up to speed and has problems turning corners.
this sounds like another one of those studies (Score:2)
Re:But just for the sake of argument (Score:1)
With a billion users, that means that there are at least 7 pages of tomatos for every man, woman and child on the Internet.
check your math:
Results 1 - 100 of about 7,280,000 for tomato [google.ca]
And everyone of them found out... (Score:4, Funny)
hmmm... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:hmmm... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:hmmm... (Score:2)
Just kidding, kidding!!!
Does that count... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Does that count... (Score:1)
Re:Does that count... (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:Does that count... (Score:1)
Unless you have infinite energy (and who does nowadays?)
I'm certain of that!
Technique (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Technique (Score:2, Insightful)
Weight: (Score:5, Funny)
Breakdown of Internet Weight:
10 gigatons of Flames.
20 gigatons of Spam.
10 gigatons of e-dicks.
2 gigatons of information.
Re:Weight: (Score:2)
News/Reports - looks like information, but it really isn't.
That should bring information to a more logical 45 kilos.
Re:Weight: (Score:1)
Re:Weight: (Score:1)
10 gigatons of Flames.
20 gigatons of Spam.
10 gigatons of e-dicks.
2 gigatons of information.
2,473 gigatons of silicone.
Continues on... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Continues on... (Score:2)
It's hi-cholesterol pepperoni pizza + meatball. Followed by Jolt and microwave twinkies.
Re:Continues on... (Score:1)
Re:Continues on... (Score:1, Informative)
- Jason
Interesting (Score:1)
Re:Interesting (Score:1)
He Ain't Heavy, He's My User (Score:4, Funny)
Re:He Ain't Heavy, He's My User (Score:2)
pasty singularity, yum
SB
Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:5, Insightful)
The Internet and the computer won't really be finished until the "booting up and logging in" are replaced with "turning it on and instantly getting what you want". We had nearly instant boots with 8-bit micros and ROMs. We gave 'em up for the flexibility of putting the OS on the hard disk. There was no need to log in when the thing wasn't networked. Alas, security concerns gave rise to the login; but we don't log in to our telephones, we just dial. There is no way to bring down the whole phone network just by dialing the wrong number or saying the wrong thing into it. So there is hope that one day the whole "boot up and login" hack that we're using can be eliminated. Then this whole "computer and the internet" project will be done. Of course, it was a government project wasn't it? Maybe that'w why it's taking so long to finish.
2600 Hz (Score:1, Informative)
Re:2600 Hz (Score:2)
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
With landline phones, the "computer" is always-on, that is, the switch at the CO.
If one just wanted to do email or UNIX command line stuff, then it would be trivial, assuming you are using a terminal and the computer at the other end is always on. Even then, the terminals of the old days still took maybe thirty seconds to warm up.
I would say maybe you could do sleep mode? My computers wake up in a second or two, quicker than any of my monitors can start showin
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
you don't really need to reboot linux anyways
It grates on me a bit whenever I hear that. Too many *NIX people are locked in to the "rackspace" mentality where shutting down is only done for maintenance. Most of us work with desktops, and although power consumption during hibernate or standby modes is not nearly as bad as just letting it sit there, it's still a hack and not a truly fast boot. I'll grant though, that it's a time-honored hack:
When I was a kid TV tubes took a long time to warm up. Sol
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
It grates on me a bit whenever I hear that. "
Yeah, but apparently you're not catching the point of the grandparent post. You only read the part you quoted. Suspending to disk, done right, can allow you to entirely power the thing down. I've tested it with my Windows laptop even to the point of removing the battery, and then restoring. The idea is to take the current state of memory (which is volatile, lost on power down) write it to disk, and then, on
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
Please explain to me how you speed up the boot process by parallelizing something on a one cpu - one system disk machine.
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
What do you think the CPU is doing while a single task is waiting on the hard disk?
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
Suprise suprise. I have. And I've written kernel patches. And I've done my own Linux system from source (no, no easypeasy Gentoo). And I've written my own OS, which admittely did little more than Linus first teletype program.
But as I said in reply to some other comment, the gains of parallelizing the current script architecture isn't very great. The amount of cpu work most boot-up scripts do is insignificant to the amount of IO they do. So as long as you
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
$ cd
$ grep sleep * |wc -l
49
Do I need to say more?
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
As I've said before, besides from those sleep the slowness comes from IO. Any CPU gain you get by parallelizing will be lost due to the fact you now need another bit of code to check finished process and keep a track of depenedencies.
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
I think internet should be more like space. If you're going to step out into no atmosphere don't blame the maintainers when you ge
Linux Bios (Score:2)
And yes, there are consumer applications [proteinos.com] in the wild.
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
The other part is about making an appliance. Great, make the next WebTV. I don't want it. I don't want a PC in console dra
Re:Still Logging In? The System Isn't Finished. (Score:2)
There is no way to bring down the whole phone network just by dialing the wrong number or saying the wrong thing into it.
u cant take down the whole internet just by connecting to some website or crashing particular servers either. what you can do is take down particular servers which might cause paths to be re-routed, but still the internet holds. to take down the entire internet would require synchronized attacks on all or most major backbones which you wou
Slashdot effect (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Slashdot effect (Score:2)
There's a goatse joke in there somewhere, folks.
(Preferably behind the event horizon. You really don't want to see the naked singularity.)
Super size the net (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Super size the net (Score:2)
Re:Super size the net (Score:3, Funny)
hackaday (Score:1, Offtopic)
blame the regular story submitters... (Score:1)
Re:hackaday (Score:1)
Weighing the internet? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Weighing the internet? (Score:1)
Woah, not even close (Score:4, Informative)
Suggestion for more accurate collection of information. Talk to ICANN or that nifty website senderbase.org [senderbase.org] that has a broader view on traffic flow across the internet.
Re:Woah, not even close (Score:2)
Many ISP's never give their users even the illusion of an I.P. so they would be totally hidden.
I just don't think it's possible... isp numbers might be interesting for themselves but I really think this is something that won't be possible.
Re:Woah, not even close (Score:1)
What does "online" mean? (Score:5, Insightful)
This isn't the 80's. People don't connect to the Internet in discrete blocks every few days. They are connected 24x7 either at home, work, even on their phones. Who is to say that somone who doesn't visit some popular website isn't online? Who is to say that a particular visit to a web site is even represents a person?
Re:What does "online" mean? (Score:2)
Re:What does "online" mean? (Score:2)
Re:What does "online" mean? (Score:1)
I turn my computer off before I go to bed.
My mothers cell phone logs out when she isn't using it.
In the United States cell phones can't stay connected to the cell network 24/7. (Plus all the times we turn our phones off for eather politeness, policy or law)
I remember people in the UK complaing about having to use the BT dial up "pay by the bandwith" style service. (Don't know if this is still the case as I don't live there)
In some parts of the world Internet access means going to a
Slashdot effect to combat global warming? (Score:3, Funny)
We could have time zone +0 GMT start jumping at one part of the day, then time zone +12 GMT do it twelve hours later.
The cumulative effect might be enough to push the Earth into a longer orbit, thus moving us further away from the sun and cooling the planet.
(Of course, it's not solely proximity to the sun that determines global temperature, and Newton's Third Law + the weight of the planet vs the weight of humans might have something to say about whether jumping would actually work, but don't let that spoil some silly science!)
Re:Slashdot effect to combat global warming? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Slashdot effect to combat global warming? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Slashdot effect to combat global warming? (Score:2)
Linking to the site doesn't change the fact that your parent poster is nuts.
Re:Slashdot effect to combat global warming? (Score:1)
Dear Cecil:
I hope that you can answer a question that has plagued me since childhood. If every man, woman, and child in China each stood on a chair, and everyone jumped off their chair at exactly the same time, would the earth be thrown off its axis? Also, if prior to jumping, they all yelled at the top of their lungs, would we hear it here in the United States, and how much of a time delay would there be? --Robert P., Los Angeles
Dear Robert:
Amazing
what the hell (Score:5, Insightful)
Horrible Horrible "study".
"So we can figure out the number of people who view hackaday by dividing 72,500 by 1.4, which gives us roughly 51,800 daily viewers."
Wrong. Bad sample population, low sample size with ONE DAY, NO inclusion of error propagation across statistical barriers. When you multiply estimates, you multiply error as well.
"With this knowlege, you can easily estimate the traffic to other sites. If we go by the 471 million estimate, Slashdot gets a whopping 380,000 daily readers."
Pretty sure I F5 more than that.
"Alexa... Alexa... Alexa...etc."
I dont know about you but Alexa is bordering on adware with this. Call me paranoid, I dont care.
Also not everyone (like me) would sign up and run a dumb banner like this on their browser, so your sample excluedes pretty much everyone that got hit with the smarts bat growing up.
Perhaps im missing some gross humorous overtone, but mod article -1 Statistical Chicanery
Re:what the hell (Score:2)
Sure, but that information is encapsulated in the page-views-per-visit figure, which will be different for slashdot than for the site for which the original author had some sample data. And you might be a statistical outlier anyway.
Let's consider the actual figure the original author extracted for the size of the i
Don't bother, TA doesn't tell us... (Score:1, Interesting)
how many Libraries of Congress does it weigh?
horribly ? (Score:4, Funny)
'Horribly' is not accepted as standard word in scientific research publications. The description must be quantitative like 'and am 91% time attracted to women at 45% of the places'. A graph of level of attraction vs cup size would be great!!
Re:horribly ? (Score:2, Informative)
Interesting Conclusions (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Interesting Conclusions (Score:1)
I'm one of them! (Score:1)
Physics? (Score:1)
How about "Abusing statistics in an unconscionable manner."? That seems more apt.
-Peter
Re:Physics? (Score:2)
In 1798 Henry Cavendish, known for his scientific brilliance and terrible fear of women, developed a system for calculating the gravitational constant (G) by measuring the gravitational attraction between two small spheres. In essence, he was able to "weigh the earth" by comparing the relationship between two known objects.
He used the term "Weighing the Internet" because he used an analogous techniqe by comparing the number of actual visitors to a website to the number recorded for the same website
Re:Physics? (Score:1)
This guy, as I said, (ab)used statistics to show . . . whatever the fuck.
Is that clearer? Cavendish didn't use statistics.
-Peter
How heavy? (Score:1)
That means AIM weighs ... 0.00000004% the Internet (Score:1)
So, SEC to validate Nielsen/NetRatings reports? (Score:1)
Public reports of ratings and fraud have been mentioned in his blog, and we have LOTS and lots of cash related the Nielsen/NetRatings reports as the issue.
Sounds like the SEC FTC should start sniffing up Nielsen skirts.
SEC raids Nielsen next.
Bet the best buy stores around Nielsen's HQ will be out of shredders tonight.
"been there, done that..." (Stanislaw Lem) (Score:1)
...roughly 1978:
Professor A. ("Affidavit") Donda (the offspring of an unfortunate genetical experiment including 3 women and a microscope slide) invents "Svarnetics" (roughly: "Advanced Mumbo-Jumboistics") as a pretense to load the worlds biggest computer with as much data as possible to find out if information has physical weight. He succeeds; however at the moment information is actually so dense that it becomes matter/weighable it turns into an info-black-hole, swallowing all information so far accumul
Weight of electrons in use at any given time? (Score:2)
Assuming X number of electrons to store a bit, multiplied by the amount of traffic in a given day, multiplied by the weight of an electron.
In Stone, of course, because nothing beats an ancient, obscure weight system used by exactly ONE country on this planet.
Weight? (Score:1)
Log in? (Score:3, Insightful)
Same math with BBC News data gives 609M (Score:2)
So a daily reach of 32,000 per million means that 0.032 of users visit the BBC News website.
Now according to this article [bbc.co.uk], the BBC news website had a record 115 million page views last Thursday, so with 5.9 page views per user (from Alexa), that's 19.49 million users.
Dividing 19.49 by 0.032 gives 609M.
Of course, something is totally out of whack because that arti
Oblig. Cartman quote (Score:3, Funny)
There are Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics. (Score:1)
Numbers work out (Score:1)
It can be measured, but not like that (Score:3, Informative)
The most obvious method is a basic opinion poll. Take a large enough random sample of the earth population, ask simple questions like "have you used the Internet ever, this year, this month, this week, today", compute the average and extrapolate.
In practice, taking a world-wide poll is not very practical, but it is certainly possible to perform polls on a country by country basis, and then compute the results. In fact, such polls are regularly conducted, and the results are just a google search away, at least for major countries.
Polls are snapshot at a moment in time, and this is problematic. If you don't pay attention, you end up adding the number of users measured in China last January, in the US last month, in Finland in May, etc. So, you want to complement the polls by an indication of trend, something that you can easily measure at frequent interval.
One possibility is to use Internet host counts, which can be obtained by sampling the DNS (see the Internet Domain Survey [isc.org]). One can measure the number of host in a country and the number of users at the time of the poll, the current number of host in the same country, and extrapolate.
There are other potential sources, e.g. measure the volume of traffic, the number of dial-up and broadband subscriptions, etc. Again, it is possible to link these numbers to various poll data, and maintain estimates.
By the way, the Internet Domain Survey in January 2005 showed 317.6 million IP addresses in use. The typical broadband connection uses one IP address per household, i.e. for 1 to maybe 4 or 5 users. A dial-up connection typically only use an address only a fraction of the time, so the ratio is even higher. Then, there are about 650 million PC available worlwide, many of which are shared. Based on that, there were probably somewhere between 500 millions and a billion users on the Internet.
So where are all the story comments on Slashdot? (Score:1)
What about weighing the information itself? (Score:2)
(1) Calculate the minimum energy required to represent one bit.
(2) Calculate the number of bits stored on the Internet.
(3)Multiply (1) by (2) an divide by c^2.
I am not a physicist, but I'm sure there must be some physical minimum amount of energy required to ensure a single bit is in a determined state.
Re:Troll (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:"Log in?" (Score:2)