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History of AMS-IX

1994
In the Science Park in Amsterdam a layer-2 shared infrastructure had been formed between (academic) organizations to exchange traffic. In February 1994 it was internationalized to exchange traffic with CERN in Switzerland and other ISP’s were allowed to connect. The name AMS-IX was first used.
1997
The twenty connected Internet Service Providers and Carriers founded the AMS-IX Association. Founding members are: Surfnet, NLnet, AT&T EMEA, Unisource, BT, KPN Qwest, XS4All, Global One, Euronet, EUnet, Wirehub, Belnet, RIPE NCC, Demon, IXE/PSI, Telecom Finland, IBM GN, A2000, UUnet/MCI, GTS Europe (Ebone)
1998
The Multicast VLAN is implemented for test-purposes and the first IPv6 tests are done. The volume of all connections increased from 4.5 Tbyte September 1997 to 26.3 Tbyte September 1998 or some 81 Mbit/s on average over the month.
2000
The Association forms the AMS-IX limited company, AMS-IX B.V., and holds all its shares. All assets are transferred to the company. Surfnet continues to manage the overall operations of the exchange, technical management is subcontracted to SARA. The Gigabit Ethernet service is launched. The 100th member is connected
2002
The operations management of the exchange is in-sourced to the AMS-IX company, a professional NOC is formed. AMS-IX extends the platform to two other sites in Amsterdam, Telecity-II and Global Switch. The total aggregate traffic at December 31st is 22 Gbps.
2003
AMS-IX becomes the IX with the largest number of connected networks worldwide with 178 members at the end of the year.
2004
The platform is migrated from a ring to a double star topology, photonic switches are deployed by an Internet exchange for the first time. The trunked Gigabit and 10 Gigabit Ethernet Services are launched.
2005
AMS-IX becomes the IX with the highest level of public exchange traffic worldwide, the 5 minute average high of the aggregate traffic now reaches 120 Gbps for a total of 234 members.
2006
The GRX peering traffic between the mobile parties is now at the level of the ISP peering traffic in 1997 with a 80Gbps peak. The ISP peering exchange switches over 1.5 Petabyte a day.