From: Sean Hastings (whysean@earthlink.net)
Date: Tue Dec 17 1996 - 14:37:38 MST
David Musick wrote:
>
> The idea of the Internet breaking down, due to an overload of messages, was
> brought up here. I began wondering: if the amount of information the
> Internet can handle at any given time is limited, then won't the price of
> sending a given amount of information through the Internet go up to match the
> demand for the limited resources? I don't see how an overload could happen if
> as the overload threshold was being approached, the price to send messages
> kept rising, thus cutting down on the length of messages people send, since it
> will cost more to send a longer message. Is my theory correct?
>
> - David Musick
Absolutely.
Periodic break downs may occur in certain regions as demand grows faster
than the architecture (just like power blackouts.) But the companies
that make a good deal of money supplying these services are not going to
say "Boy, having all these customers is sure a lot of trouble. Lets quit
doing this rather than trying to keep up with this huge demand for our
services."
--Sean H.
--E-mail: mailto:whysean@earthlink.net
--V-mail: (504)825-1232 or (800)WHY-SEAN
--S-mail: 5500 Prytania St. #414/New Orleans, LA/70115
--U.R.L.: http://home.earthlink.net/~whysean
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 14:35:54 MST