LANTimes article "A better Internet awaits us" [Nice ASND references to Qwest and GTE contracts]
wcmh.com./98/98aug/808a039a.html
In the future, alternatives may enable information flow to avoid the bottlenecks that impede it today
By Alan S. Kay
To visualize today's Internet, picture the vast freeway system that traverses the United States. Think of a broad highway, built largely with federal dollars, that has created new categories of traffic which now threaten to choke it. No vehicle can claim a priority to travel, regardless of the urgency of its mission or the perishability of its cargo. When it's rush hour, everyone slows down.
Now picture diamond-marked carpool lanes that let certain vehicles cruise past those stalled on the rest of the highway. That's QoS (quality of service).
The need for QoS is driving the academic community's effort to create Internet2 and the U.S. government's NGI (Next Generation Internet) initiative. These new national networks will be able to ensure timely delivery of complex binary data.
In April, Vice President Al Gore unveiled a plan for the newest backbone addition to the Internet's developing successor. Called Abilene, the new network is being developed by UCAID (University Corporation for Advanced Internet Development), which is using Qwest Communications International Inc.'s nationwide fiber optic network and technologies from Cisco Systems and Northern Telecom Ltd.
At the end of 1999, the Abilene project is supposed to connect member universities through regional GigaPoPs (gigabit-per-second points of presence) and interconnect with the vBNS (very high performance Backbone Network Service), a high-speed network run by the National Science Foundation and MCI Communications Corp.
Business can't wait The history of the Internet suggests that these academic and government efforts will need a newer, faster Internet, but business can't wait for that to happen. Effective Internet-based applications, such as videoconferencing and distance training, have the potential to cut costs and time to market, but without the reliability promised by NGI, their potential will never be realized.
In response to these business demands, ISPs are rushing to upgrade their Internet backbones to support time-dependent and other mission-critical services. A January 1998 survey by Business Research Group indicated that ISPs are rebuilding their core networks and POPs to increase availability and offer different classes of services accompanied by SLAs (service-level agreements). The survey indicated that 32 percent of the 150 ISPs queried offer QoS agreements, and 34 percent already sell a preferred pool of bandwidth at a premium price--a percentage that is certain to increase.
The most readily available way to support modern business tools is through increased bandwidth. Most major national service providers are adding optical fiber and fast switches to increase throughput. Sprint Corp., for example, has deployed Cisco's 12000 Series of gigabit switch routers on its Internet backbone, allowing it to offer OC-12 (622Mbps) throughput. And newcomer Qwest has completed more than a third of the build-out of its 16,000-mile IP-over-optical-fiber network.
Optical fiber has the additional advantage of supporting WDM (wave division multiplexing), which can increase the carrying capacity of optical fiber cost-effectively. Sprint, for instance, is building from its current level of WDM support on 80 percent of its route miles toward 98 percent by the end of 1998.
To further that effort, Sprint announced in March that it is adding 40-channel Dense WDM systems from CIENA Corp. The CIENA technology is scalable to as many as 96 channels per SONET fiber, allowing a throughput of as much as 240Gbps.
But throwing bandwidth at the QoS issue demands is at best a short-term solution. The NGI and Internet2 plans incorporate differentiated levels of guaranteed maximum packet loss and latency and minimum "jitter."
Short-term solution ISPs are considering two approaches to support business-grade connectivity. One involves modifying IP's "democratic" packet handling, either as a response to a request or by assigning priorities to different packet origins or classes of service. Most IP-based carriers are looking toward priority packet handling plan to implement the RSVP (Resource ReSerVation Protocol) extension to IP, which will let users request extra bandwidth for particular uses. The Business Research Group survey reported that 25 percent of national ISPs, 8 percent of regional ISPs, and 75 percent of RBOCs will offer RSVP by the end of 1999.
The other infrastructure modification that will support business SLAs is a shift to ATM, which provides a homogeneous environment within which data streams can be prioritized. For example, Qwest, which has championed IP as the vehicle for business connectivity, announced in April that it was buying ATM switches and network-management tools from Ascend Communications Inc. According to an April 21 press release, Quest claims this new network, managed by Ascend's Navis end-to-end network and service-management products, will provide Qwest the ability to offer data services with SLAs to their corporate customers.
Providers seeking to differentiate themselves in the marketplace have begun to offer such SLAs for their IP packet-based networks. In April, GTE Internetworking announced it will credit its customers for one day of service whenever they cannot reach a site within 10 minutes "because of a failure in GTE Internetworking's backbone," or sustain more than a 10 percent packet loss on the backbone over that same period.
GTE also will deploy Ascend ATM, frame relay switches, and network-management software in building out its Global Network Infrastructure, which is planned to elevate throughput to OC-48 (2.5Gbps). "Quality of service is a front-page issue with us," says Ken Baldwin, assistant vice president for product marketing at GTE Internetworking in Irving, Texas. "We intend to offer customers SLAs with metrics."
Such commitments to service guarantees, however limited, represent the first halting steps toward an Internet that business can rely on.
Alan S. Kay covers business and consumer technology from San Francisco. |