IP traffic to explode, and most of it will be wireless, study says

 

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Global IP traffic will approach the zettabyte range by 2015, and wireless systems will carry a majority of the load, according to a Cisco report.

The wired world has been steadily becoming unwired, and in a few years the amount of Internet traffic from wireless devices will surpass those of their wired counterparts, a new report from Cisco predicts. And the traffic on wired networks will be nothing to sneeze at, either.

Overall, total global IP traffic by 2015 will reach the zettabyte threshold, according to the latest Cisco Visual Networking Index, released June 1. Officially, the report estimates that traffic will hit 966 exabytes, which is close enough to round up. (A zettabyte is 1,000 exabytes, or 1 billion terabytes; a terabyte is 1 trillion bytes, if that helps put it in perspective).


Related story:

Wireless data traffic reaching monster proportions


Wireless traffic has steadily been gaining on wired traffic, of course, mirroring the growth of smart phones, tablets, GPS devices and wireless networks and hot spots. In 2010, wired traffic made up 63 percent of all data, to 37 percent for wireless. By 2015, the report projects, wireless will take up 54 percent of IP traffic, to 46 percent for wired.

Cisco describes the index as “an ongoing initiative to track and forecast the impact of visual networking applications,” and the report attempts to put the numbers into understandable — at times amusing — contexts.

For example, the report states, by 2015, the digital-data equivalent of every movie ever made (7.3 petabytes) will travel across global IP networks every five minutes. And it would take more than five years to watch the amount of video (1 million minutes) that will cross global IP networks every second. Internet video, the report states, will make up 62 percent of consumer traffic.

And people will have plenty of things on which to watch all that video. In 2015, there will be twice as many devices connected to IP networks as people on the planet, up from a one-to-one ratio in 2010, according to the report. (The number of networked devices will surpass the population later this year.)

Put another way, at some point this year there will be one square foot of digital screens for each person on Earth, and it will only grow from there.

And it’s not just the number of people or devices connected to the Internet that is expanding global IP traffic, it’s also the amount of data each person generates or consumes. Another 2015 prediction is that 6 million Internet households — that’s households, not workplaces — will join what Cisco calls the “terabyte club,” generating more than a terabyte of data a month. Another 20 million will generate a half-terabyte a month.

In a regional breakdown, the report notes that IP traffic is growing fastest in technologically developing countries in Latin America, followed by the Middle East and Africa.

But it’s still growing in North America by 30 percent a year. By 2015, the report states, traffic in North America will amount to 22 exabytes a month, second only to the Asia-Pacific region’s 24 exabytes. 

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