| aka: HOME - - STRATEGY - project management - technology - design - tools - Blue Sky Radio - klogs - community - staffing - shortage watch - - LIFE - events - food - Bloggers for Hire - shrub - public policy - books - Obituaries a la Blog | |
| |
| Knowledge weblogs. Knowledge management, learning organizations, and other practices to reduce collective idiocy. Klogs at dijest. K-Logs Yahoo! list. Roland Tanglao, Denham Grey's KmBlogger Directory My Radio Klogging Kit for Managers. In opml. Open in Browser. Subscribe to the klogging kit using Radio IO. |
|
Sunday, July 13, 2003
community design klogs strategy technology
This is very early in the adoption of RSS feeds. Very few publishers. Even fewer readers. How will this change? Assume growth. In two years: I assume AOL, Microsoft, Yahoo!, and Terra will turn on blogging tools in the next 18 months, and 10% of the online community (70 million people) become bloggers. So, many feeds. TiVo users often record more programming than they can possibly watch (assuming employment and sleep). This assures freedom and choice. There is every reason to believe that newsreader users will behave likewise. Which brings us to bandwidth... A picture is worth a thousand words. Literally. If so, what is audio and video? Moblogging and photoblogs will exacerbate this. In bandwidth terms, text is nearly free over land lines. Images, sounds, and video will comprise a growing share of bandwidth costs. We'll also grow in our ability to read them. Newsreaders will help us filter and prioritize our reading. So our capacity to follow more feeds will also grow by at least one to two orders of magnitude. Most people follow under 100 feeds in their newsreaders now. I follow nearly 1000, 50 religiously, 200 regularly. But all of them are searchable on my hard drive and they all pop-up in a balloon when they update. And we don't have useful filters now. When the tools start to do more, the number of feeds consumed per reader will grow. Lets assume that for every blogger there are two non-bloggers reading. That puts feed readership around 200 million. So you have 200 million people reading probing a thousand feeds an hour for updates. That's 200 billion probes an hour. Don't get me started on how many terabytes of flow that represents. Do people only probe hourly? How often would you update for the latest scores during the World Cup or SuperBowl? For election results? For your medical report? Some fraction of services must support updates at closer intervals. Peer-To-Peer (P2P) and caching by intermediaries (communal aggregators) have helped others to scale. Both add delays to distribution while absorbing publisher bandwidth costs and connections. There is no reason why we shouldn't apply both architectures to this problem. So, I ask the Echo community, What changes if: P.S. I welcome challenges to my assumption, estimates, and conclusions. While I'm pretty confident in the shape of this analysis, details matter.
|
Editorial Policies | Privacy - Editorial - Corrections - Syndication
FAQ | About Phil - diJEST mailing list - Contact Write to&nbps;me
This is my Blogchalk: United States, California, Oakland, Adams Point, English, Phil, Male, 41-45.
HOME - - STRATEGY - project management - technology - design - tools - Blue Sky Radio - klogs - community - staffing - shortage watch - - LIFE - events - food - Bloggers for Hire - shrub - public policy - books - Obituaries a la Blog