Early reports of the sudden and tragic death of 44-year-old Steve Irwin sent millions of people online to find out if the rumors were true.
reported how it and its sister site at theage.com.au both began to experience significant slowdowns. That report cited web measurement firm Hitwise in noting that Australian Internet traffic to print news and media websites hit a peak not seen since a mid-May miner rescue incident. A number of sites felt the stress as Irwin's fans searched for more information: Other key news sites also showed signs of strain and some, including CNN, had to switch to a "lite" mode, ditching bandwidth-hungry elements on the home page in order to cope with the surge in usage. In Australia, the ABC news site temporarily crashed under the weight of clicks and came back shortly after with a home page that only displayed the one story that everyone wanted to read. Google News currently lists over 2,400 stories about Irwin, and that topic has stayed atop Google News for over a day. Blog search sites like Sphere and Technorati both list Steve Irwin as a top search for posts throughout the blogosphere. Fans have also begun to make their tributes known online as well. The report noted how fan-created films showed up on video-sharing sites like YouTube and Google Video. The Del.icio.us | Digg | Yahoo! My Web | Furl Bookmark murdok: David Utter is a staff writer for murdok covering technology and business.Crocodile Hunter Crashes News Sites
0 views
Comments (0)
Please sign in to leave a comment.





No comments yet. Be the first to comment!