Subject: RE: Web Count From: R Ballard Date: Thu, 6 Apr 1995 12:54:39 -0400 (EDT)
How the Web Was Won
Subject: RE: Web Count From: R Ballard Date: Thu, 6 Apr 1995 12:54:39 -0400 (EDT)
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On Thu, 6 Apr 1995, J.J. Linden wrote:

> On Thu, 6 Apr 1995, Don Taylor wrote:
> 
> > At 09:22 PM 4/5/95 -0400, R Ballard wrote:
> > > There are about 10 million internet host IDs, 
> > >which front for an average of 20 users (TIA, Pink-Slip, Fire-walls, and 
> > >application level SLIP.)  Don't forget shared logins and shared hosts 
> > >(multi-user systems like UNIX and VMS) which can run X11 clients.
> > 
> > Where did you ever find an average of 20 users per host ID?
> 
> I've heard estimates ranging from 2 to 10, never anything like 20.  There
> are, if the figures I've heard are correct, roughly one million Prodigy
> accounts, not two; Prodigy is already assuming two users per account.
Each host has an IP Address.  The estimate was an average of 20 USERS per
IP Address.  You have prodigy.com (1 IP address) and 2 million USERS.
You have places like UCB where it's 1 user/ip address.

> Don't forget the huge number of netters who have multiple accounts (I have
> three addresses myself, though only one works, and will have two more by
> month's end, both active and both fully web-capable).

I have 3 net addresses and 5 e-mail hosts.

At one point in March 1994 there were supposedly 200 Million accessible
e-mail addresses.  The probability is that many were duplicates (I had 
e-mail addresses on prodigy, compuserve, mcimail, digex, aol, delphi,
and dowjones).  I only used 2 of them for economic reasons.
  
> http://www.mids.org/mids/howbig.html  --  size of the Internet
> http://www.mids.org/mids/growth/internet/index.html  -- web growth
> http://info.isoc.org  --  Internet Society homepage

There are also several wais and gopher sources.
I haven't looked lately.  Some of the more informational statistics are
things like TCP conects, gigabytes/day, usenet postings, e-mail messages,
traffic on the back-bones, DNS hosts registered, downloads of TIA, 
Trumpet, NetScape, Mosaic, and Cello (each download spawns an average of 
2 users/month).

E-mail addresses, newsgroup posters, and ip addresses are kept in public 
registries.

Isn't it great, we're so successful, we don't even know how well we're doing.

	Rex Ballard


From rballard@cnj.digex.net Thu Apr  6 14:14:07 1995
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