Hibernia (5580) have good latency throughout Europe and are huge on AMS-IX.
Latency is around 18ms from Edinburgh to Amsterdam and 5ms from London via their network. Used them for transit and they gave me a circuit onto AMS-IX too which could be worth you looking into. Between the route servers and peers on the exchange I was getting ~210k routes. On 17 Jul 2015 08:22, "Paul S." <cont...@winterei.se> wrote: > Rather than a peer, it might be an okay idea to try out peering at NYIIX > (and if the funds permit to get transport, AMS-IX/DE-CIX). > > You'll quickly find that peering is *very* useful in Europe, if you have > any EU bound traffic at all. > > On 7/17/2015 午後 04:06, Colin Johnston wrote: > >> good isp's / peers are in no particular order >> bt >> telstra ex psinet uk/eu >> >> colin >> >> Sent from my iPhone >> >> On 17 Jul 2015, at 07:52, Jared Geiger <ja...@compuwizz.net> wrote: >>> >>> HE uses Telia for Transit. So you won't gain much redundancy there. I >>> would >>> go with Cogent if you have lots of European customers and North American >>> business customers. One not on your list is Level3. They would be strong >>> in >>> that blend too. >>> >>> You might also try joining a peering point. You'll gain a lot by just >>> peering with the route servers. >>> >>> On Thu, Jul 16, 2015 at 6:34 AM, Dovid Bender <do...@telecurve.com> >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> We are looking to peer with another ISP in NY. My options are: >>>> Telia >>>> Tata >>>> Cogent >>>> >>>> We currently have (and will keep): >>>> HE >>>> NTT >>>> TELX (They use NTT and HE and we are looking to replace them). >>>> >>>> We need an ISP that has a good peering/connectivity in Europe and Asia >>>> (Israel specific). >>>> >>>> Any advice on who to go with? >>>> >>>> >