Akamai Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: AKAM)
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For the first time, report examines average measured connection
speeds of the top 10 fastest cities per continent/region
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Sandy, Utah; Beersheva, Israel; Wellington, New Zealand; and
Lausanne, Switzerland among the cities that possess the top average
connection speeds in their respective regions
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State of the Internet report to begin to measure connection speeds
from major mobile providers
Akamai Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: AKAM), the leader in powering video,
dynamic transactions and enterprise applications online, today announced
the release of its 3rd Quarter, 2009 State of the Internet
report available for download at www.akamai.com/stateoftheinternet.
Leveraging published reports and information gathered from its network,
the Akamai report provides insight into key Internet statistics such as
origin of attack traffic, network outages, and broadband connectivity
levels across the globe.
New to the report in the third quarter, Akamai takes a more granular
look at the top 10 fastest cities per continent/region. The report also
adds its first-ever look and analysis at connections to Akamai
identified as coming from networks associated with mobile providers.
Some highlights from the report follow:
Fastest Cities
The report introduces a ‘city view’ of connection speeds, which reveals
that a number of cities around the world have access to particularly
high-speed connectivity. In Asia, Europe, and North America, for
example, even the slowest cities in the top 10 saw measured speeds in
excess of 10 Mbps. Other trends revealed at the city level show that
Slovakia, for example, has four of the top 10 fastest cities in Europe,
with average speeds between 11-14 Mbps. Brazil has four of the top 10
fastest cities in South America, with average speeds between 1.6-1.9
Mbps.
Global Average Connection Speeds
The majority of countries within the top 10 (based on average measured
connection speed) saw average connection speeds increase on a
quarter-over-quarter basis. Globally, the average connection speed
increased 18 percent to 1.7 Mbps – a level consistent with the first
quarter of 2009. Among the top 10 countries, seven of them saw flat to
higher average connection speeds in the third quarter.
Romania, Sweden, and the Czech Republic all saw quarterly declines in
their average connection speeds, though they all maintained positive
yearly growth. The United States (ranking 18th overall), on
the other hand, saw a small quarterly gain in average connection speeds,
increasing to 3.9 Mbps, but declined slightly from a year-over-year
perspective.
Also during the third quarter, 103 of the 226 countries measured had
average connection speeds below 1 Mbps, down from 125 countries in the
prior quarter. Akamai also measured average connection speeds below 100
Kbps in seven countries during the third quarter – half as many as last
quarter. The lowest average connection speed seen in the third quarter
was 43 Kbps on the island of Mayotte, located in the Indian Ocean
between northern Madagascar and northern Mozambique.
Current highlights and historical trends for average connection speeds
on a global basis can be found in Akamai’s "Broadband Adoption Trends”
data visualization tool, available at http://www.akamai.com/dv5.
Fastest U.S. States
Quarterly changes in average measured connection speeds within the
United States were mixed in the third quarter. Of the top 10 states
measured, three states and the District of Columbia saw speeds increase
15 percent or more, while New Hampshire and New York saw nominal
decreases. Among the top 10 states, Massachusetts has seen the greatest
yearly increase in average measured connection speed, growing 21
percent. In contrast, New Hampshire’s average of 5.9 Mbps is 10 percent
slower than in the third quarter of 2008.
Attack Traffic
During the third quarter of 2009, Akamai observed attack traffic
originating from 207 unique countries, nearly consistent with 201 unique
countries in the second quarter. In a shift from prior quarters, Russia
and Brazil unseated the United States and China as the two largest
attack traffic sources, accounting for nearly 22 percent of observed
traffic in total, half as much as was seen from China and the United
States in the second quarter. Akamai observed attack traffic targeted at
more than 3,800 unique ports, with the top 10 ports seeing nearly 95
percent of the observed attack traffic, up from 90 percent in the second
quarter.
Internet Connectivity
In the third quarter of 2009, slightly more than 444 million unique IP
addresses, from 226 countries, connected to the Akamai network – a 4.5
percent increase over the second quarter of 2009, and a 17 percent
increase over the same quarter a year ago. For the sixth consecutive
quarter, the United States and China continued to account for nearly 40
percent of the observed IP addresses. The Top 10 countries continued to
remain the same quarter-over-quarter, although Brazil moved up one spot
(passing Spain to move into the ninth spot).
Mobile Connectivity
In response to the growing amount of Internet content being accessed
through mobile devices, such as smartphones and laptops equipped with
mobile broadband connection technologies, Akamai plans to begin
publishing insights into metrics collected from connections to Akamai
identified as coming from networks associated with mobile providers.
Over time, the number of metrics and mobile providers examined in the
State of the Internet report is expected to expand. For the third
quarter of 2009, Akamai analyzed the average connection speeds from
three of the leading mobile providers within the United States. Initial
observations show that the average connection speeds across the three
U.S. mobile carriers approached or exceeded 700 Kbps. Although Akamai
observed significant variability in the average measured connection
speeds for the carriers over the last year, it appears that all three
are converging on average speeds in the 700-800 Kbps range.
Akamai's unique level of visibility into the connection speeds of
systems issuing requests to the Akamai network has created a
one-of-a-kind view into broadband adoption around the globe. Leveraging
that data, Akamai's quarterly State of the Internet report identifies
both the countries and U.S. states with the fastest and slowest average
connection speeds exhibited by IP addresses originating from those
respective geographies. To learn more, and to access the archive of past
reports, please visit www.akamai.com/stateoftheinternet.
To download the figures from the Q3 2009 State of the Internet, please
visit: http://wwwns.akamai.com/q309_soti_figures.zip.
The Akamai Difference
Akamai® provides market-leading managed services for powering
video, dynamic transactions, and enterprise applications online. Having
pioneered the content delivery market one decade ago, Akamai's services
have been adopted by the world's most recognized brands across diverse
industries. The alternative to centralized Web infrastructure, Akamai's
global network of tens of thousands of distributed servers provides the
scale, reliability, insight and performance for businesses to succeed
online. Akamai has transformed the Internet into a more viable place to
inform, entertain, advertise, interact, and collaborate. To experience
The Akamai Difference, visit www.akamai.com
and follow @Akamai on Twitter.