[news.newusers.questions] volume of traffic on the net

dbf@myrias.com (David Ferrier) (01/15/90)

Does the bulk of traffic on Usenet originate from teachers and students?

I read a broad cross-section of newsgroups, so was surprised when the
volume of incoming messages dropped to zip in *all* of them last week.
Allowing for a lag to allow for messages written before the end of the
Christmas school break break to be delivered, this drop in message
traffic coincided exactly with school starting.  I observed the same
drop in message traffic last September, when the autumn term commenced.
-- 
David Ferrier                            | computer: a million morons
uunet!myrias.COM!dbf                     | working at the speed of light

tale@cs.rpi.edu (David C Lawrence) (01/16/90)

In article <632413855.12814@myrias.com> dbf@myrias.com (David Ferrier) writes:

> Does the bulk of traffic on Usenet originate from teachers and students?

Perhaps the greatest percentage of articles do come from university
sites, though it seems traffic goes down more than can be accounted
for by that around school breaks.  Traffic begets traffic.  A lot of
people not in school are also on holiday around those break sessions
and summer is just a nice, quiet period anyway.  People in their
rocking chairs sipping mint julips, y'know.

It would be a difficult thing to measure accurately.  For example,
though I post from a .edu site I am neither student nor instructor;
just a hohum staff member who was right back at work on 26 December.
Also, some students have jobs at .gov or .com sites or get to the net
through public access systems or UUCP machines whose com/gov/edu/mil/
whatever status is not evident from the name.  There are other
wrenches to throw in to the works, too, like the fact that some .edu
sites don't allow students to post.  For global statistics about what
sort of people make up the net you'd probably find a very wide margin
of misrepresentation.

Sometimes you can tell be the flavour of the group, however, what to
expect around break time.  For example, social groups (many soc and
alt groups) seem to be pretty highly populated by the younger set,
which includes a lot of students.  I suspect that their traffic drops
more during the break periods than sci and comp groups.  Of course, I
don't have any hard evidence to back this up, it's just my perception
after a few years of participating in USENET.

Dave
-- 
   (setq mail '("tale@cs.rpi.edu" "tale@ai.mit.edu" "tale@rpitsmts.bitnet"))

wisner@hayes.fai.alaska.edu (Bill Wisner) (01/22/90)

dbf@myrias.com (David Ferrier) writes:

>Does the bulk of traffic on Usenet originate from teachers and students?

The bulk of traffic on USENET originates from soap opera viewers,
heavy metal fans, and those who enjoy flaming the aforementioned
groups.

w.