Before Cloudflare, before RIPE Atlas—there was PingER (1995). It measured internet health across 160+ countries with nothing but ICMP pings.
Meet — one of the earliest global internet measurement projects (started in 1995 at SLAC). It sent tiny pings around the world to measure lag and packet loss, helping scientists see where the internet was fast… and where it wasn’t. Pingher
PingER: The Forgotten Pioneer That Tracked the Internet’s Growth It sent tiny pings around the world to
Without PingER, we wouldn’t have the same understanding of the digital divide or the tools to monitor global networks. Next time you run a speed test, thank a 30-year-old ping. ❤️ If by “Pingher” you meant a person, a place, a brand, or something else entirely (e.g., a nickname, a typo for “Pincher” or “Ping He”), just let me know and I’ll rewrite the post from scratch. ❤️ If by “Pingher” you meant a person,
Here’s a social media post prepared for LinkedIn, Twitter (X), or a blog, depending on your audience. I’ve assumed “Pingher” refers to the misspelling or shorthand for (Ping End-to-end Reporting), the internet performance monitoring project from SLAC/Stanford. If you meant something else, let me know and I’ll revise. Option 1: LinkedIn / Professional Blog (Detailed & Educational)
Most people credit commercial tools like ThousandEyes or Kentik with internet performance monitoring. But the real pioneer? (Ping End-to-end Reporting).