If you look at the graph at the bottom of the page, they say that their windows 2000 box can perform over 1 million requests per second with IIS! http://www.zdnet.co.uk/pcmag/ne/2000/11/01.html Now, I may be naive in my math (and if so I need to know why) but on a machine that has a 100 Mbps card, if I serve 1 million pages in one second, that means my page size (web page Im serving) is 100000000 (ie. 100 Mb) / 1 Million = ~ 13 bytes So if they are saying they did 1 million requests per second on a 100 Mbps connection, then that means their web pages were 13 bytes long.... Are they nuts or am I interpreting the graph wrong? Thanks Lee ______________________________________________ FREE Personalized Email at Mail.com Sign up at http://www.mail.com/?sr=signup - : send the line "unsubscribe linux-net" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org