[AusNOG] iCloud - Is it going to hurt access providers?
Skeeve Stevens
Skeeve at eintellego.net
Sat Sep 3 20:58:10 EST 2011
Hey Greg,
Couple of things.
Incremental is only for documents you've already got. Rip a new CD into your iTunes, create new documents, take 50 photos, and it all new uploads… every time for the first time.
Also, when I activate iCloud backup, it says that it will disable 'automatic' iTunes… but I think you can still do it manually.
Btw… anything you upload to iCloud at the moment can be deleted at any time… hope you saw that in the beta7 release notes ;-)
…Skeeve
--
Skeeve Stevens, CEO - eintellego Pty Ltd - The Networking Specialists
skeeve at eintellego.net<mailto:skeeve at eintellego.net> ; www.eintellego.net
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From: Greg Lipschitz <Greg at thesummitgroup.com.au<mailto:Greg at thesummitgroup.com.au>>
Date: Sat, 3 Sep 2011 10:53:04 +0000
To: Skeeve Stevens <skeeve at eintellego.net<mailto:skeeve at eintellego.net>>, "'ausnog at ausnog.net<mailto:'ausnog at ausnog.net>'" <ausnog at ausnog.net<mailto:ausnog at ausnog.net>>
Subject: RE: iCloud - Is it going to hurt access providers?
It's funny you bring this up Skeeve.
I just backed up my phone to iCloud last night..... 3.5GB of data pushed up to Apple. I'd hate to see my restore time on it.
It's only once you've backed it up for the first time that you actually get the option as to what you want to and don't want to include in your backup. From there on, its incremental.
In my case, I've got 2.5GB of topographical maps for when I go out bush, do I really want them backed up... couldn't give to hoots. Just my basic settings and apps, even if it doesn't backup the apps just simply remember what I had so I can do a base restore and then it pulls them from the appstore again, that would be more than acceptable.
I think Apple will find out very very quickly that their method of handing backup is flawed and they will have to revise how they do it and what they actually backup.
The one think that really erks me is that once you enable iCloud on your iOS device, bye bye local sync. Which dip shit thought this one up! Really, why wouldn't you still want a local copy for "quick" restore. If I lost my iPhone right now, It would be a few hours before it were restored..... stoopid idea Mr Jobs.
My 2c Worth..... cheers and beers all. Enjoy the rest of the weekend!
Regards,
Greg Lipschitz
Director
Summit IT Management<http://www.thesummitgroup.com.au/> | Summit Internet<http://www.summitinternet.com.au/> | Summit Creative<http://www.summitcreative.com.au/> - ‘reach your peak’
Divisions of The Summit Group (Australia) Pty Ltd
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________________________________
From: ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net<mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net> [ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net<mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net>] on behalf of Skeeve Stevens [Skeeve at eintellego.net<mailto:Skeeve at eintellego.net>]
Sent: Saturday, 3 September 2011 8:44 PM
To: 'ausnog at ausnog.net<mailto:'ausnog at ausnog.net>'
Subject: [AusNOG] iCloud - Is it going to hurt access providers?
Hey all,
I've been thinking about the impact that iCloud (by Apple) will have on the Internet.
My guess is that 99% of consumer internet access is Asymmetrical (DSL, Cable, wireless, etc) and iCloud when launched will 'upload' obscene amounts of gigs of music, tv, backups, email, photos, documents/data and so on to their data centres.
Now, don't misunderstand me, I love the concept of iCloud, as I do DropBox, but from an Access Providers perspective, I'm thinking this might be a 'bad thing'.
>From what I can see there are some key issues:
* Users with plans that count upload and download together.
* The speed of Asymmetric tail technology such as DSL
* The design of access provider backhaul (from DSLAM to core) metrics
* The design of some transit metrics
So basically the potential issue is that a large residential provider could have thousands of users connect to iCloud, their connections slowed because of uploading data, burning their included bandwidth caps, slowing down the backhaul segment of the network, and as residential providers are mostly download, some purchase transit from their upstreams in an symmetric fashion.
This post is really just to prompt discussion if people think there is anything to actually worry about, or there are other implications that I've not really thought of yet.
…Skeeve
--
Skeeve Stevens, CEO - eintellego Pty Ltd - The Networking Specialists
skeeve at eintellego.net<mailto:skeeve at eintellego.net> ; www.eintellego.net
Phone: 1300 753 383 ; Fax: (+612) 8572 9954
Cell +61 (0)414 753 383 ; skype://skeeve<UrlBlockedError.aspx>
facebook.com/eintellego or eintellego at facebook.com<mailto:eintellego at facebook.com>
twitter.com/networkceoau ; www.linkedin.com/in/skeeve
PO Box 7726, Baulkham Hills, NSW 1755 Australia
--
eintellego - The Experts that the Experts call
- Juniper - HP Networking - Cisco - Brocade
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