Posted By: Stebet | Jul 27th, 2007 @ 2:07 AM
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Stebet
Stebet
Buuuurrrritoooo!
I just caught this Nimbus link on bharry's blog.

This seems an awful lot like what we heard about "Avalanche" a few years ago (the peer-to-peer bittorrent-like download system Microsoft Research was working on).

I think this would make for great video material Charles Smiley

Could we get some more information on this, i can't try it out a.t.m since i'm at work and behind a firewall.
W3bbo
W3bbo
The Master of Baiters
Stebet wrote:
Considering how much people have hated the Microsoft Downloader like during the Vista beta i could definitely see this come in handy. I hope this will be see used as a delivery mechanism (at least as an alternative) for betas and large downloads from MS in the future.


Ha! No.

Bram Cohen (author of BitTorrent) wrote an article explaining why Microsoft's implementation doesn't work as well as BitTorrent.

And ISPs love to throttle or otherwise shape BitTorrent and other P2P traffic. It's only a minority of decent ISPs that don't (mine included, wheee[1]). They aren't going to accept this with open-arms.

Microsoft can afford it, what's wrong with just using Akami and delivering the binaries over HTTP? It's worked fine the past 10 years.

[1]But my Netgear router/modem has the habit of crashing after 30 minutes of BT speeds above 150Kbps
W3bbo wrote:


Microsoft can afford it, what's wrong with just using Akami and delivering the binaries over HTTP? It's worked fine the past 10 years.



Because it's not very efficient? Wasn't there talk during one of the Office/Vista betas that they actually had to rate limit the downloads because there was a risk of it saturating the endpoints of the internet? Akamai may well cope but that doesn't mean the whole thing will.

P2P has demonstrated that it's a particularly good way of distributing large files that lots of people want to access. Why shouldn't Microsoft take advantage of that?
There's scenarios where the Akamai mirror near you is very slow.

For example, with a just released thing like VS2008, the akamai mirrors do not automatically fetch all the stuff. If you try to download the beta and get directed to your nearby "mirror" which does not yet have it, it will begin to download it at the same time. Result = Akamai speed ~100 where normally it is max speed when the stuff has fully mirrored to the nearest local mirror.

In comparison, I'm just downloading the MSDN docs with this tool and getting close to full speed.

mVPstar
mVPstar
I'm white because I smelt an onion.
I think it is Avalanche.

At the very bottom, under Related Resources, there's a link to:
Peer-to-Peer Network Coding Research...which says Avalanche at the top.

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