Business | CES | Digital audio | Gadgets | Games | Green computing | Home entertainment | Internet & broadband | Laptops | Linux | Macs | PC Peripherals & components | PC security | PCs & laptops | Mobile phones | Digital photography & video | Software | Wi-Fi & networking
AMD | Apple | BT | Dell | Google | HP | Intel | Microsoft | Nvidia | Sony
Windows XP | Windows Vista | Windows 7 | Apple iPhone | BlackBerry | Apple iPad
December 2, 2009
YouTube and Facebook are having a serious effect on corporate bandwidth, says Network Box.
The managed network provider surveyed 19 billion URLs visited by 30,000 end users between July and November of 2009, and video-sharing site YouTube came out top, consuming an astounding 7.8 percent of all available bandwidth.
Behind this came Facebook with 4.4 percent, Yimg (Yahoo's image search) at 2.8 percent, and Google on 2.7 percent.
Uncomfortably perhaps, Microsoft updates alone managed to eat 3.8 percent of bandwidth.
These figures are totals for the company traffic analysed, not averages, and the actual bandwidth being consumed by different websites will vary from company to company.
It is still eye-opening that only a handful of non-business websites managed to consume 21.5 percent of all bandwidth at these companies, which hints at an even greater and hidden volume being consumed by http's long tail.
The company also measured traffic volumes, as opposed to bandwidth used, and came up with a very similar list, though YouTube dropped off the top-five list entirely.
That suggests that a relatively small number of visits to Google's video website is consuming a much larger volume of actual traffic capacity, which might be expected for such a bandwidth-intensive application.
"Businesses have to be aware that their employees use Facebook at work. They should have systems in place to ensure that they are getting the best use they can from company resources," said Network Box's Simon Heron.
"This is more than a technological problem. It's about employee management."
The fact that Windows updates - patching security problems- now eats so much valuable bandwidth demonstrates that the nature of the average network is now very different to the LAN of a decade ago.
Heron was at pains to point out that a lot of http traffic is legitimate, and companies might be benefitting from some of the apparently non-legitimate traffic.
Does social networking generate business? Nobody knows, but in some cases the answer might be yes.
Equally, YouTube also hosts a a large volume of business-oriented content, as well as videos of ice-skating cats and celebrity happenings.
See also: Twitter and Facebook costs businesses £1.38m
Free whitepaper: Is social networking really bad for business?
<<newer story | back to index | older story>>
Submit to:Digg
Slashdot
Del.icio.us
Reddit
Subscribe to PC Advisor now and claim your FREE gift
Does your smartphone replace your need for a laptop when on the move?
% of PC Advisor readers agree with you
What tasks can your smartphone do that would have traditionally been done on a laptop?
Follow the conversation at @SmartphoneFocus
web browsing, search facilities, voip, email, word processing everything RT @Graham_D_C
Mainly email but getting better at spreadsheets etc, RT @IDGdan
Question of the day!
Does your smartphone replace your need for a laptop when on the move?