Web wide crawl with initial seedlist and crawler configuration from March 2011. This uses the new HQ software for distributed crawling by Kenji Nagahashi.
What’s in the data set:
Crawl start date: 09 March, 2011
Crawl end date: 23 December, 2011
Number of captures: 2,713,676,341
Number of unique URLs: 2,273,840,159
Number of hosts: 29,032,069
The seed list for this crawl was a list of Alexa’s top 1 million web sites, retrieved close to the crawl start date. We used Heritrix (3.1.1-SNAPSHOT) crawler software and respected robots.txt directives. The scope of the crawl was not limited except for a few manually excluded sites.
However this was a somewhat experimental crawl for us, as we were using newly minted software to feed URLs to the crawlers, and we know there were some operational issues with it. For example, in many cases we may not have crawled all of the embedded and linked objects in a page since the URLs for these resources were added into queues that quickly grew bigger than the intended size of the crawl (and therefore we never got to them). We also included repeated crawls of some Argentinian government sites, so looking at results by country will be somewhat skewed.
We have made many changes to how we do these wide crawls since this particular example, but we wanted to make the data available “warts and all” for people to experiment with. We have also done somefurther analysis of the content.
If you would like access to this set of crawl data, please contact us at info at archive dot org and let us know who you are and what you’re hoping to do with it. We may not be able to say “yes” to all requests, since we’re just figuring out whether this is a good idea, but everyone will be considered.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011
Mon 16 November 200917:28 GMT |22:28 Local Time



The Radio Frequency Office (RFO) under the Ministry of Communications and Information Technologies of Azerbaijan took part in the first coordination meeting on the orbital slots for the country’s national communications satellite - Azersat.
Ilham Efendiev, chief engineer of the RFO, said Azeri and Kazakh delegations exchanged views in Astana (Kazakhstan) on the coordination of Azersat and Kazsat
According to him, there is a need for coordination of Azersat’s orbital slot degrees with 30 countries.
The coordination meetings are held at the request of the International Telecommunication Union to determine the orbital slot degrees where Azersat will be located.
The satellite is slated for launch in December 2011.
The satellite launch is estimated to cost nearly $160 million.
Of this, about $87 million will go to manufacturing, $16 million to main and auxiliary management systems, $40 million to the launch of our satellite into orbit and $18 million to insurance costs. It is a commercial project and expected to return costs in 5-7 years.
Azerbaijan will use only 20% of this satellite’s capacity and rent excess capacity to other countries. 40% of the capacity has already been given to Malaysia.
Orbital Sciences Corporation is a Dulles, Virginia company which specializes in satellite launch and manufacture.
Azerbaijan has leased two orbital slots to orbit two satellites – AzerSpace and AzerSat.
The country’s TV broadcasts are being transmitted through satellites of other countries at present.
Azerbaijan’s satellite will deliver broadcasting services though a broader area covering the entire Europe (excluding Scandinavia) and half of Asia with most of Kazakhstan.
Support to Azerbaijan is given by Silk Sat Programme initiated by Russian academic Roald Sagdeyev residing in the US. Silk-Sat project stipulates creation of single satellite system of the Silk Route countries with financing by the US and Russia
APA

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