The Meet Me Room: Where ISPs Connect Their Networks To Each Other


Photo: Dave Bullock

In 2006, Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska famously referred to the Internet as a "series of tubes," and got ribbed for it. But here in the Meet Me Room in a business building in downtown Los Angeles, Sen. Stevens ain't that far off.

From Dave Bullock's article at Wired:

In the bowels of the world's most densely populated Meet-Me room -- a room where over 260 ISPs connect their networks to each other -- a phalanx of cabling spills out of its containers and silently pumps the world's information to your computer screen. One tends to think of the internet as a redundant system of remote carriers peppered throughout the world, but in order for the net to function the carriers have to physically connect somewhere. For the Pacific Rim, the main connection point is the One Wilshire building in downtown Los Angeles.

If this facility went down, most of California and parts of the rest of the world would not be able to connect to the internet. Tour one of the web's largest nerve centers, hidden in an otherwise nondescript office building.

Link - Thanks Dave!


this is really asinine. so much communication is so exposed by this bottleneck. one of the biggest original points of the web was the redundancy, how nobody could stop the flow by sticking a bomb in the right box. did some MBA make a nice powerpoint presentation to greedy stupid stockholders or something? we see how easy it is for a sub and some clippers to rip out the heart of the web in the middle east. would take not much initiative to the same thing right there. so stupid.
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When I see this I just keep singing over and over in my head "BRAZIL.....DAH DAH DAH ... DAH DE DAH DAH". Totally looks like a seen from the film Brazil.

For those who don't know what I am writing about and too bothered to rent the movie you can sort of see here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=teufz17PqoY
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"...one of the biggest original points of the web was the redundancy..."

Guess some of those biggest original points turn out to be some of the biggest fallacies. My guess is that the system was designed like most any network only on a much bigger scale; there's no redundancy built in, but the modularity of the system makes it easy to replace failure points and reroute traffic.
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Same reaction here : where are the civilian redundancy promises of this military creation?

One question for the knowledgables : are the ISP connected to only 1 of those buildings?
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"I would just love to get in there and chop that all up!"

Really? I would love to get in there, chop a single one (preferredly one in the middle) and leave. Good luck trying to find the faulty one ;)
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I always thought Stevens was unjustly slammed for his too simple analogy. If he had said "bandwidth overload" instead instead of "tubes", he might have got more respect.
//(Fred Tuttle is my hero.)
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