If what you are looking for is an estimate of fractal dimensions in the Internet, look at the following paper, which was published in the 1999 ACM/SIGCOMM conference: On Power-Law Relationships of the Internet Topology, Michalis Faloutsos, University of California at Riverside; Petros Faloutsos, University of Toronto; and Christos Faloutsos, Carnegie Mellon University. Power laws are measurable, and somewhat related to the "fractal" nature. According to the measurement described in the paper, the Internet topology is, in fact, fractal. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Sampo A Syreeni" <ssyreeni@cc.helsinki.fi> To: "Carol A Braddock" <cab8@censored.org> Cc: <cypherpunks@algebra.com> Sent: Sunday, December 10, 2000 9:23 AM Subject: CDR: Re: Fractal geodesic networks
On Fri, 8 Dec 2000, Carol A Braddock wrote:
So say you -could- estimate a fractal dimension for the internet. What would the number be good for?
If it could be shown that a consistent estimate exists and it was calculated, it would probably affect the scaling properties of the Net - after all, what are fractal dimensions but numbers relating linear scale changes to changes in measures?
Sampo Syreeni <decoy@iki.fi>, aka decoy, student/math/Helsinki university