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July 7, 2009 2:18 PM PDT

News sites stay up during Jackson memorial

by Josh Lowensohn

Weeks ago, the news of Michael Jackson's passing brought major news sites to their knees, so Tuesday's memorial service for the singer was expected to bring similar results.

This time it appears sites were better prepared for the traffic onslaught.

According to Gomez Incorporated, a company that monitors Web usage quality, there were both slowdowns and outages, including one that dramatically slowed Twitter's performance. The company analyzed performance on seven news sites from multiple locations during Tuesday's event, with some of the biggest slowdowns coming to streaming video. Asia experienced a 40 percent increase in what the company calls "stalling issues," with the U.S. experiencing an increase of around 5 percent.

One of those news outlets that was serving up live streaming video was CNN, which according to internal data, topped out at 781,000 concurrent streams of the event. Between midnight EDT and 4 p.m. the site also pulled in 11 million unique users who turned 72 million pages.

Ustream, which provided live streaming in a partnership with CBS, says the event was the "largest ever" that had been hosted on the service, in part because it was a worldwide broadcast. The service had 4.6 million streams of the memorial going, made up from 1.6 million unique users. It also had more than 12,000 messages posted every minute to its built-in user chat rooms. (CNET News is published by CBS Interactive, a unit of CBS.)

Besides slowdowns in streaming video, news sites also had lower availability, which means some users were unable to access them. Gomez recorded that number as low as 98.2 percent, whereas the sites usually maintain uptime in excess of 99.65 percent. Response times also took a hit. News sites experienced double, and nearly triple the load time to serve up pages. In the case of Twitter, many users were unable to view or post messages to the service. At what was seemingly the peak of Twitter's load, Gomez benchmarked it as taking around 62 seconds for the site's home page to load, then allow users to log in--a process that normally takes just a few seconds.

Update: See also Larry Dignan's analysis over at ZDNet. He points to data host Akamai's visualization tool, which shows real-time activity on its sites which represent around 20 percent of the Web's traffic. There's a noticeable bump around the time the memorial service begins.

Internet Web traffic hit its peak right around the beginning of the service, according to Akamai.

(Credit: CNET / Akamai)

CNET News' Greg Sandoval contributed to this report.

Josh Lowensohn writes for Webware.com, CNET's blog about Web applications and services. E-mail Josh, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/Josh.
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by ca5ter July 7, 2009 7:15 PM PDT
Twitter is a gauge of stupidity, not internet traffic.
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by MrBoomshadow July 8, 2009 5:47 AM PDT
Why did so many people watch the memorial? Were they hoping he'd pop out of the coffin in a red leather jacket and start singing "Thriller"?
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by man_w_balls July 8, 2009 6:46 AM PDT
The ability for so many people to be in denial about reality at once is baffling. All these people act like Jesus just died again or something... But Michael Jackson was no saint! Remember how he slept with little kids (and probably molested them)? Remember how he turned his skin white and his face into a plastic monstrosity? He was a freak and a pervert. He was a great musician. He was no saint.
Since the memorial was on all the TV channels at once, I happened to catch a few moments of it. It was enough to hear Jesse Jackson saying, "There wasn't anything strange about Mike." Total state of denial.
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by Seaspray0 July 8, 2009 11:30 AM PDT
The news sites stayed up because Michael Jackson's condition hasn't changed... he's still dead.
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