The Fractal Nature of Internet Traffic

Basic Properties of Voice Traffic

The statistics of telephone voice traffic are well-understood.
Years of measurement and study led to the development of a branch of mathematics, queueing theory, for dealing with voice traffic.
The Poisson distribution (similar to the normal distribution) describes the statistics of voice traffic.
Voice traffic is
nearly homogeneous,
of constant (low) information rate, and
typical calls last a fairly long time (very long by computer standards).
Because of the low information rate per call, many concurrent voice calls can be multiplexed: they can share a common circuit because the circuit's information capacity greatly exceeds the requirements of a single call.
Voice traffic is controlled by circuit switching: routers keep track of the connections from link to link, so each message is uninterrupted.
If I call TicketMaster in Chicago, a circuit is established between here and there, and it stays open until I've bought my Tori Amos tickets.

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