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| April 13, 2005 | A PRIMEDIA Property | |
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::June 6th:: Chicago:: ::Advance Registration Deadline April 15th:: Get the bottom-line on VoIP Strategies, Technologies and Profits for service providers. Join the Editors of Telephony at the VoIP: TELEPHONY conference, Monday, June 6, 2005 in Chicago (one day before SUPERCOMM Exhibits Open). Speakers from BellSouth, Broadwing, Level 3, Cox Communications, Covad, Wiltel, Vonage, TDS, Tekelec, Calix, Lucent Technologies, Broadsoft and more. REGISTER TODAY! ADVANCE REGISTRATION DISCOUNTS END APRIL 15 Editor's Perspective By Ed Gubbins Apr. 13, 2005 If necessity is the mother of invention, who are its children? The question occurred to me as I pondered the Metro Ethernet Forum's ambition to eventually elevate Ethernet to a globe-trotting protocol through a rigorous, standards-based certification process. Though Ethernet was designed to transport data quickly over very short distances, you'd never know it from the killing the industry is making shooting this stuff across town and even cross-country. Ethernet was originally instructed not to get too upset about packet loss, but now it's being saddled with sensitive applications like voice and video for which packet loss is abhorrent. And though its popularity has been attributable in large part to its simplicity, it's getting a whole lot more sophisticated, as new applications require new levels of protection and quality of service. (Continued after ad) ADVERTISEMENT ![]() Explore Fiber Mining techniques to increase your network capability. Optelian Access Networks, has developed the RGN LightGAIN family of products to solve fiber optic reach problems and eliminate fiber congestion. Economical DWDM packages are now available in 4,8, 12 or 16 wavelength configurations. CLICK here to mine your way to savings www.optelian.com
This departure from original design is par for the course, I guess. IP,
which is becoming the lingua franca for everything from long-haul
networks to residential phone service, was originally designed to
mitigate the threat of a Soviet nuclear attack on U.S. military
communications. But you don't see Vonage
ads on TV promising protection from thermonuclear war. (Conversely,
the guys at DARPA who developed packet switching probably had no idea
at
the time what the long-term implications were for porn.)
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