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North American Network Operators Group Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical Re: links on the blink (fwd)
Michael Dillon <michael@memra.com> wrote: >Are you sure that creative ways of using lots of smaller T3 bandwidth >boxes couldn't solve the problem? There are hard architectural limits on the number of core routers in the defaultless backbone. Backbone has to have a relatively small number of BGP speakers, to avoid severe routing information propagation problems. There _are_ "creative ways", see for example SprintLink presentations on NANOG, the planned "3-dimensional grid" backbone topology (it allows to grow the aggregate capacity to about OC-3). However, you inevitably run into capacity limitation of LAN interconnects. Then, there's a problem with load balancing, as it generally cannot be done with exterior protocols which have to select a single path. (And there's no easy way to do per-destination load distribution on a large scale). It's only a kludge to survive until (and if) somebody will build real central-office routers. >If you are right, then yes it sucks. Obvoiusly the ATM and OC3 >technologies are right where you have pegged them, but what about >parallelism using existing DS3 technology? And if this is done, are there >mux/demux boxes that can handle DS3's<->OC3 ? There are boxes which can *statically* mux/demux OC-192 to DS-3s. Synchronous muxes is not a high technology, being basicallly decorated shift registers. >One nice side effect is that this may force the video-on-demand folks off >the Internet and into straight ATM instead. I rather like the future >scenario where the globe is girdled by an IPng data network and a separate >parallel video/ATM network. That already happened. I would rather see things going in opposite deirection. (For VOD applications ATM is adequate, as it only demultiplexes big pipes from VOD servers into small access pipes; there's no backwards data flow, and no statistical multiplexing). However, the utility of VOD is very questionable, as the basic need to see the movie quite adequately and cheaply satisfyed by low-tech video rentals. It is not a "killer application", definitely. Video telephony and distributed computing network can be such applications but they beg for symmetrical IP connectivity. --vadim
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