Website Performance of World Cup 2010 Federation sites

Introduction

WatchMouse monitored the availability (uptime) and performance (page load speed) of the websites of the federations of all participating countries and continents in the World Cup 2010 from June 16 through June 28, 2010.

We report on the following for each of the websites:

The real-time status of each of the sites and a seven-day history can be found at WorldCup2010.public-website-status.com.

 

A press release including observations, analyses and website performance statistics of the World Cup 2010 websites that were monitored by WatchMouse can be viewed at: WatchMouse Press room

 

Availability

The uptime of each of the 38 sites is presented below. In accordance with industry standards, availability of ≥99.9% is regarded as 'good' while anything below 99% is regarded as 'poor' site uptime. (99% uptime equals over 80 hours downtime per year, or about 1 business day per month).

 

# API Uptime percentage Downtime per month
CAF 100.00 0 minutes
Côte d'Ivoire national football team 100.00 0 minutes
FFA Australia 100.00 0 minutes
FIGC Italy 100.00 0 minutes
JFA Japan 100.00 0 minutes
KNVB Netherlands 100.00 0 minutes
NZF New Zealand 100.00 0 minutes
UEFA 100.00 0 minutes
United States national soccer team 100.00 0 minutes
Uruguay national football team 100.00 0 minutes
11  AFC 99.97 13 minutes
11  FFF France 99.97 13 minutes
11  FSS Serbia 99.97 13 minutes
11  AFA Argentina 99.97 13 minutes
11  South Africa national football team 99.97 13 minutes
11  Switzerland national football team 99.97 13 minutes
11  FIFA 99.97 13 minutes
18  DFB Germany 99.94 27 minutes
18  NZS Slovenia 99.94 27 minutes
18  KFA Korea Republic 99.94 27 minutes
21  OFC Oceania Football Confederation 99.89 49 minutes
22  Ghana national football team 99.86 1 hour, 2 minutes
22  DBU Denmark 99.86 1 hour, 2 minutes
24  CBF Brasil 99.83 1 hour, 16 minutes
24  FAF Algeria 99.83 1 hour, 16 minutes
24  Greece national football team 99.83 1 hour, 16 minutes
27  CONCACAF 99.80 1 hour, 29 minutes
27  RFEF Spain 99.80 1 hour, 29 minutes
29  Honduras national football team 99.77 1 hour, 43 minutes
30  Cameroon national football team 99.72 2 hours, 5 minutes
31  CONMEBOL 99.68 2 hours, 23 minutes
32  Chile national football team 99.57 3 hours, 12 minutes
33  Portugal national football team 99.54 3 hours, 25 minutes
34  NFF Nigeria 99.29 5 hours, 17 minutes
35  Slovakia national football team 99.17 6 hours, 11 minutes
36  England national football team 98.86 8 hours, 29 minutes
37  Mexico national football team 98.41 11 hours, 50 minutes
38  Paraguay national football team 92.43 2 days, 8 hours, 19 minutes

 

Performance

The performance (page load speed) was measured for all websites of the participating World Cup 2010 federations and the results are displayed in the graph(s) below.

 

Performance
Performance

 

Site Performance Index

Combining a site's availability with measurement of speed and load time, WatchMouse gives each monitored site a Site Performance Index (SPI). The SPI represents the relative website performance. An SPI below 1000 indicates a site that performs 'well' and has a good user experience. An SPI between 1000 and 2000 represents an 'acceptable' user experience while an SPI of more than 2000 represents a site with serious user experience issues.

Site Performance Index

 

Methodology

WatchMouse monitored the availability (uptime) and performance (page load speed) of the websites of the federations of all participating countries and continents in the World Cup 2010 from June 16 through June 28, 2010.

 

Availability

One of the WatchMouse monitoring stations retrieved the homepage of the site every 5 minutes, without graphics, frames, etc; and redirects were followed. Each HTML page was expected to download within 8 seconds, without any errors. If that time was exceeded, it was verified by one of the other WatchMouse monitoring stations. If this station also established an error, it was counted and recorded as 'poor availability' or 'unavailable'. Server errors (i.e. 500 Server Error) are not verified by a second monitoring station, and those errors also contribute to the uptime percentage.
An uptime of 99.99% or higher is extremely desirable for high-profile companies and companies that achieve high turnovers through their sites. Many companies stipulate an uptime of 99.9% as a minimum requirement in the Service Level Agreement with their IT department or provider. An uptime below 99% is usually regarded as unacceptable. In the uptime table above these limits are indicated with colors.

 

Performance

For each HTML page retrieval all timing stages were measured and averaged over the survey period for each website. Errors are not included in the performance chart. Please see below for the definitions of the individual timing stages:


  • Resolve time: Time (in ms) for resolving the IP address of a host name.
  • Connect time: Time (in msec) for connection phase of TCP/IP.
  • Processing time: Time (in msec) from first byte sent to first byte received (also known as 'time to first byte').
  • Download time: Time (in msec) from first byte sent to last byte received (also known as 'time to last byte').
  • Total time: Total time, i.e. connect time plus download time (in msec).

 

Site Performance Index

The WatchMouse Site Performance Index (SPI) quantifies the user perception of speed and availability of a site in a single number. The SPI is computed by adding up the time needed to load the main page, adding a penalty for each failed request. The higher the number, the lower the customer experience of the site. Sites with an SPI of 1000 perform well, whereas an index of 2000 or higher is an indication of a seriously negative user experience.

The WatchMouse Site Performance Index was developed by Dr Peter van Eijk and his team, based on many years of practical experience and research into the performance and availability of computer systems. The current version of the SPI is computed as follows.
One of the 42 test stations of the WatchMouse worldwide network retrieves the homepage of the site at a fixed frequency, without images, frames, etc. This HTML page is expected to download within 8 seconds, without any errors. If this time is exceeded, or if an error occurs, this is verified by one of the other test stations. This check is called the "2nd opinion check". If this check also reports an error, this is counted as "not available".
All 2nd opinion checks, and all successful checks, are taken into account. All the connect and download times of all successful checks are added together. For each failed (2nd opinion) check, a 10 second penalty is added. The SPI is the sum of these, expressed as an average over 1000 checks.

This website performance monitoring research covers the websites of the following organisations: CAF, Côte d'Ivoire national football team, FFA Australia, FIGC Italy, JFA Japan, KNVB Netherlands, NZF New Zealand, UEFA, United States national soccer team, Uruguay national football team, AFC, FFF France, FSS Serbia, AFA Argentina, South Africa national football team, Switzerland national football team, FIFA, DFB Germany, NZS Slovenia, KFA Korea Republic, OFC Oceania Football Confederation, Ghana national football team, DBU Denmark, CBF Brasil, FAF Algeria, Greece national football team, CONCACAF, RFEF Spain, Honduras national football team, Cameroon national football team, CONMEBOL, Chile national football team, Portugal national football team, NFF Nigeria, Slovakia national football team, England national football team, Mexico national football team, Paraguay national football team.

North Korea was not included in the survey as there is no official public website for the national football team of this country.

Learn more about WatchMouse at www.watchmouse.com