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PCH Logo
Exchange Points:
Denver (MAX),
Eugene (OIX),
Los Angeles (LA-IIX),
Palo Alto (PAIX),
San Jose (MAE-West AMES),
San Diego (SD-NAP),
Seattle (SIX) Exchange Points:
Ashburn (Equinix),
Miami (NOTA),
Tyson's Corner (PAIX-VA) Exchange Points:
London (LINX),
Stockholm (NetNod),
Vienna (VIX) Exchange Point:
Tokyo (NSP-IXP2) Exchange Point:
Singapore (SOX) Exchange Points:
Kampala (UIX),
Narobi (KIX) Exchange Point:
Kathmandu (NPIX)
  NEWS
January 21 2007: PCH Research Director Bill Woodcock speaks on the need for Internet instrumentation at OECD/NSF workshop on the Future of the Internet. [More...]
January 23 2007 : PCH Research Director Bill Woodcock presents about Network growth for ISPs in developing countries at the SANOG meeting in Sri Lanka. [More...]
November 14 2006 : PCH Internet Economic Analyst Gaurab Raj Upadhaya talks about Regional Internet Exchanges at the RIPE NCC regional Meeting in Bahrain. [More...]
 
Packet Clearing House is a non-profit research institute that supports operations and analysis in the areas of Internet traffic exchange, routing economics, and global network development.
     Originally formed in 1994 to provide efficient regional and local network interconnection alternatives for the west coast of the United States, PCH has since grown to become the leading proponent of neutral independent network interconnection and provider of route-servers at major exchange points worldwide.
     Today, PCH provides equipment, training, data, and operational support to organizations and individual researchers seeking to improve the quality, robustness, and accessibility of the Internet.
 
     Current and ongoing PCH projects include the construction of Internet Exchanges Points (IXPs) throughout the developing world; operation of the INOC-DBA global Internet infrastructure protection hotline; support for globally distributed domain name system (DNS) resources; implementation of network research data collection initiatives in more than three dozen countries; and the development and presentation of educational materials to foster a better understanding of Internet architectural principles and their policy implications among policy makers, technologists, and the general public.

 

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