December 19th, 2008 by
So, there’s good news and bad news, and per tradition, we’ll be starting with the latter. Three of four undersea cables that route internet traffic from Asia to North America have inexplicably been cut, meaning that your international Quake III server may be a bit slow this evening. The good news is that this fiasco clearly hasn’t affected you yet. The AP has confirmed via Egypt’s communications ministry that the cables have indeed been severed, causing massive outages in select portions of the world. Oddly, no suspicions of subterfuge have been mentioned, but we have all ideas rumors will start to swirl if another gets snipped. So, tell us readers — are you still online? Wait, don’t answer that.
[Via ZDNet]
Filed under: Networking
Three of four undersea internet cables get cut, hasn’t affected you yet originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 19 Dec 2008 15:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Posted in internet, cable, us, usa, asia, america, undersea, undersea cable, UnderseaCable, broken, Interoute | No Comments »
February 5th, 2008 by
Filed under: Networking
digg_url = ‘http://digg.com/world_news/Fourth_undersea_cable_cut_near_UAE_suspicions_rise’; For the fourth time in a week, an undersea communications cable has apparently been cut (or “failed due to a power outage,” as some sources suggest), and while no official reports of subversion have surfaced just yet, things are beginning to get suspicious. Flag Telecom, a subsidiary of Indian conglomerate Reliance ADA Group, has had two cables damaged in the span of a week — a quandary it has never dealt with until now. As it stands, traffic from the Middle East and surrounding areas is being routed through various other cables in an attempt to remain online, but any more snips and we could be dealing with ping times eerily similar to those seen in 1993 (or much, much larger issues).
[Image courtesy of DivingCo]
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Posted in internet, cable, communications, underwater, undersea, cabling, optical, undersea cable, UnderseaCable | No Comments »
January 11th, 2008 by
Filed under: Networking
It’s not like we haven’t seen consortiums working to establish better links between America and Asia, but the more the merrier, right? Apparently, Verizon Business has just recently received the all-important thumbs-up from the FCC to “activate and operate the Trans-Pacific Express submarine cable system in the US.” The TPE cable is hailed as “the first next-generation undersea optical cable system directly linking the US and mainland China,” and is the first major system of its kind to land on America’s West Coast (Oregon, to be precise) in over seven years. For those curious, the 10,563-mile submarine communications cable will be able to support the equivalent of 62 million simultaneous phone calls — which is “more than 60 times the overall capacity of the existing cable directly linking the US and China” — and will initially provide capacity of up to 1.28Tbps. So, when will this thing be up and running? If all goes to plan, it should be fully operational by August (you know, prior to the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing).
[Image courtesy of Devicepedia]
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Posted in verizon, internet, china, cable, us, usa, china unicom, ChinaUnicom, asia, america, China Netcom, China Telecom, ChinaNetcom, ChinaTelecom, Chunghwa Telecom, ChunghwaTelecom, Korea Telecom, KoreaTelecom, oregon, submarine cable, SubmarineCable, TPE, Trans-Pacific Express, Trans-pacificExpress, undersea | No Comments »