Telco networks light up as COVID-19 powers traffic surge
Posted: Sun Jan 03, 2021 11:54 pm
COVID-19 lockdowns that forced Australians indoors for most of 2020 has put local telecommunications networks through their paces, as they cater to the ever increasing data demand from customers.
The latest pressure point is expected to be the upcoming socially-distanced New Year’s Eve, which Telstra says will see its mobile network carry 92 million messages, a spike of 80 million compared to last year.
Overall data appetite of consumers is also on the rise, with data usage on Telstra networks expected to come in at 4.75 petabytes compared with 3.6 petabytes last year. With usage clocked at 1.3 petabytes in 2016, this year's estimate highlights why local telcos are scrambling to bolster their respective networks.
Meanwhile, Optus' network has also been processing considerable traffic loads over the holiday period. Mobile data demand peaked on Boxing Day at 685 Gbps (gigabits per second), higher than the 532 Gbps recorded during same period last year.
One major driver of demand on the fixed networks is video games, with gaming updates (Call of Duty and Fortnite) making up the bulk of the 10 top traffic events, with some customers downloading file sizes of up to 30 GB (gigabytes). Meanwhile, the 2020 migration of work from offices to homes has also seen uplink traffic (that is, data that flows from users' laptops back to the network) on the fixed network jump by more than 100 percent during the day, as video conferencing was widely embraced.
"Immersive gaming is going to become a lot more prevalent and even as we come out of the lockdowns, I think we will work differently and the changes we have seen in the traffic patterns are here to stay," Mr Seneviratne said.
Telco networks light up as COVID-19 powers traffic surge
The latest pressure point is expected to be the upcoming socially-distanced New Year’s Eve, which Telstra says will see its mobile network carry 92 million messages, a spike of 80 million compared to last year.
Overall data appetite of consumers is also on the rise, with data usage on Telstra networks expected to come in at 4.75 petabytes compared with 3.6 petabytes last year. With usage clocked at 1.3 petabytes in 2016, this year's estimate highlights why local telcos are scrambling to bolster their respective networks.
Meanwhile, Optus' network has also been processing considerable traffic loads over the holiday period. Mobile data demand peaked on Boxing Day at 685 Gbps (gigabits per second), higher than the 532 Gbps recorded during same period last year.
One major driver of demand on the fixed networks is video games, with gaming updates (Call of Duty and Fortnite) making up the bulk of the 10 top traffic events, with some customers downloading file sizes of up to 30 GB (gigabytes). Meanwhile, the 2020 migration of work from offices to homes has also seen uplink traffic (that is, data that flows from users' laptops back to the network) on the fixed network jump by more than 100 percent during the day, as video conferencing was widely embraced.
"Immersive gaming is going to become a lot more prevalent and even as we come out of the lockdowns, I think we will work differently and the changes we have seen in the traffic patterns are here to stay," Mr Seneviratne said.
Telco networks light up as COVID-19 powers traffic surge