Jovial Monk wrote:There are a lot more cables than that, much more capacity
As I said, I was actually including the dark fibre in my estimation. The current bright fibre capacity of Southern Cross is only 295 Gb.Super Nova wrote:Apparently there is a lot of dark fibre around the world.
Great! I'd actually genuinely like to be wrong on this.Will try and get some data on those cables.
No, not everyone, but presumably more that 12,000 peoplenot everyone will be on to the US
But in fact the opposite is occurring, Google does have an Oceania data centre, apparently in Sydney, which is used for its search engine cache, but all the gmail, youtube and document cloud data is still kept in little chunks in data centres all over the world. Worse still, the Oceania data centre will be moving off shore meaning the load on cables heading into and out of Australia will increase, rather than decrease.We will need to distribute core data to be physically closer to the end user. Like have a cached copy of all non realtime data in each country asa minimum. I think Goodle do this anyway.
This, coupled with the trend of many organizations to move away from locally hosted data to using services like gmail, cloud and google docs means more and more previously local traffic heading offshore. So the problem is getting worse, not better. It's no small discrepancy, doubling the capacity won't do it. Software improvements may see a 4 fold improvement in speeds with the existing cable. But we'd still need to lay 25 times more cable than we have under the sea. That would cost $40 billion.