How much bandwidth do you think Google uses a day?

Discussion in 'Google' started by MediaHustler, Mar 8, 2006.

  1. #1
    Out of all their sites (programs, countries, etc.)

    How much bandwidth do you think they use a day?

    I'm guessing 10,000 Terabytes.
     
    MediaHustler, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  2. frankcow

    frankcow Well-Known Member

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    #2
    Would that not be 10 Hexabytes?
     
    frankcow, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  3. MediaHustler

    MediaHustler Well-Known Member

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    #3
    I guess, lol.
     
    MediaHustler, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  4. hulkster

    hulkster Peon

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    #4
    10 GoogleBytes ...
     
    hulkster, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  5. lorien1973

    lorien1973 Notable Member

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    #5
    I'd get google measures it in dollars. they make $300million in bandwidth per day :p
     
    lorien1973, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  6. MediaHustler

    MediaHustler Well-Known Member

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    #6
    Wait could you rephrase that it made no sense, sorry.
     
    MediaHustler, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  7. MediaHustler

    MediaHustler Well-Known Member

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    #7
    Heh yeah they invented their own bytes.
     
    MediaHustler, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  8. hulkster

    hulkster Peon

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    #8
    Google is actually a number ...
     
    hulkster, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  9. MediaHustler

    MediaHustler Well-Known Member

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    #9
    Are you sure???
     
    MediaHustler, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  10. irka

    irka Well-Known Member

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    #10
    lol so 10 google bytes = ??? 100 DP bytes ?
     
    irka, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  11. MediaHustler

    MediaHustler Well-Known Member

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    #11
    500 DP bytes
     
    MediaHustler, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  12. jackburton2006

    jackburton2006 Peon

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    #12
    I don't know how much they use, but it sure is worth it, and then some!
     
    jackburton2006, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  13. shauner

    shauner Well-Known Member

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    #13
    It is, but it's spelled differently. A Googol is 10 raised to the power 100, or 1 with 100 zeros behind it.
     
    shauner, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  14. MediaHustler

    MediaHustler Well-Known Member

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    #14
    Could this be why there is so many o's in Goooooooooogle?
     
    MediaHustler, Mar 8, 2006 IP
  15. FujitsuBoy

    FujitsuBoy Guest

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    #15
    Using absolutely no science at all, I estimate 1.0091 gigabits/sec for the crawlers alone!
     
    FujitsuBoy, Mar 9, 2006 IP
  16. Seiya

    Seiya Peon

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    #16
    Funny i tought the highest numbers were around 10^40
     
    Seiya, Mar 9, 2006 IP
  17. exam

    exam Peon

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    #17
    But whatever number you have you can always add 1 to it...?
     
    exam, Mar 9, 2006 IP
  18. latehorn

    latehorn Guest

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    #18
    I've always wondered. I think it's hell much, considering all the spammers.
     
    latehorn, Mar 9, 2006 IP
  19. Seiya

    Seiya Peon

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    #19
    I meant any number that is realistic. Of course i can say i have a number of 10^1023 but thats not realistic :)

    I meant any number that could actually exist in the universe [to measure something] right now is up to 10^40 or so :p
     
    Seiya, Mar 9, 2006 IP
  20. exam

    exam Peon

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    #20
    I'm not sure I follow you. If I took a second to think about it, I'm sure I could list some things that would need numbers larger than 10 to the power of 40 to describe them.

    Here's Google's first result for "largest number". Here's an interesting quote from the page:
     
    exam, Mar 9, 2006 IP