Nieman Foundation at Harvard
HOME
          
LATEST STORY
Politico Pro wants subscribers doing “deep research” on its site, not on ChatGPT
ABOUT                    SUBSCRIBE
Nov. 4, 2008, 12:34 p.m.

Will web servers buckle under the traffic?

Rich Miller at the blog Data Center Knowledge — I’m sure you’re all reading it on a daily basis anyway — has a good post about how news web sites are prepping for the onslaught of traffic coming tonight. Three highlights:

— He seems to hint at potential trouble for FiveThirtyEight and other sites “hosted on platforms known primarily for their affordability.” In other words, sites that don’t pay big bucks for hard-core servers and instead rely on free/cheap options like Google’s Blogger.

— Rich points to this real-time graph from Akamai (who sells bandwidth to a lot of news sites), which should track global web traffic minute-by-minute tonight. See if it can break the record set during the ’06 World Cup.

— According to The New York Times, Yahoo actually saw much bigger traffic the day after the 2004 election than the day of: 142 million page views versus 80 million. So if your server avoids meltdown tonight, don’t necessarily think the worst is over.

Joshua Benton is the senior writer and former director of Nieman Lab. You can reach him via email (joshua_benton@harvard.edu) or Twitter DM (@jbenton).
POSTED     Nov. 4, 2008, 12:34 p.m.
Show tags
 
Join the 60,000 who get the freshest future-of-journalism news in our daily email.
Politico Pro wants subscribers doing “deep research” on its site, not on ChatGPT
A good news organization sits atop valuable archives. Why not use them to give readers answers to their questions?
News unions are grappling with generative AI. Our new study shows what they’re most concerned about
We find six areas where news media unions are focusing their generative AI attention and concern — and two where they’re not.
FiveThirtyEight is shutting down as part of broader cuts at ABC and Disney
Though Nate Silver left in 2023, FiveThirtyEight still offered election forecasts, a presidential approval tracker, and other tools.