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To: Mark Fowler who wrote (73787)8/14/1999 4:29:00 PM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Voice over DSL sounds promising

By GREG LANGDON
Network World, 08/02/99

Digital subscriber line (DSL) service
to date has been used for moving
data over the Internet at high speeds
through existing copper links. However, a new class of
equipment will broaden DSL's usefulness by allowing the
movement of voice and data simultaneously over a single
copper link, without architectural changes to existing
networks.

Diagram of how it works

The payoff: Smaller organizations will soon be able to
buy integrated, richly featured voice/data services in a
way previously available to only the largest firms.

All the major telephone companies have standardized on
ATM as the Layer 2 DSL transport protocol. In DSL
data applications, stand-alone or networked PCs connect
to a DSL modem, bridge or router, which function as
network endpoints and provide a high-speed interface to
the DSL service. The DSL modem, bridge or router
encapsulates the PCs' IP-based data into ATM and
transmits the resulting cell flows as ATM over DSL to
the carrier's central office. At the central office, ATM
traffic from multiple DSL links is aggregated and
multiplexed onto a common upstream link, and each cell
flow is directed toward its destination by one or more
ATM switches.

DSL links are ready-made for voice/ data integration.
ATM is designed to simultaneously transmit diverse
traffic types over a common net and does an exceptional
job differentiating traffic into distinct classes of service.
What's needed to enable integrated voice/data over DSL
is equipment that supports voice over ATM at each end
of the local loop. The types of equipment needed for
customer premises and central offices are the
next-generation integrated access device (NG-IAD) and
voice gateway, respectively.

The NG-IAD eliminates the DSL modem, bridge or
router for data communications by interfacing PCs or
PC networks to the DSL service, encapsulating IP-based
data into ATM for DSL transmission and handling
functions such as routing and IP address management. At
the same time, the NG-IAD provides the DSL interface
for voice equipment such as telephones, fax machines,
key systems and PBXs, and sends and receives voice over
ATM on the same DSL line. Because ATM excels at
simultaneous transmission of voice and data, the result is
toll-quality telephone service with enhanced calling
features intact, and continuous, high-speed Internet
access or remote LAN access over a single twisted
copper pair.

At the carrier's central office, a voice gateway completes
the picture for integrated voice/data over DSL.
Encapsulated voice traffic received at the carrier's DSL
Access Multiplexer (DSLAM) is sent to the voice
gateway, where it is converted to conventional voice
signals and sent to a Class 5 voice switch. Data received
at the DSLAM is carried as packet or cell traffic to its
destination, typically an ISP or corporate network, just
as in current DSL service.

This service can be readily and seamlessly integrated into
existing nets. The use of a NG-IAD at the customer
premises ensures that the impact on the voice and data
equipment is small. Also, a voice gateway converts voice
traffic between voice over ATM and the traditional
formats used in existing phone nets.

One of the primary benefits of integrated voice/data over
DSL is the ability to purchase all voice and data services
from a single provider while gaining very high-speed
data communications. Any business of any size will be
able to enjoy the simplicity of a single point of contact
for customer service, billing, expansion of services and
management.

Another benefit is NG-IADs can dynamically make
under-used voice-traffic bandwidth available to data
traffic.

The market for NG-IADs has just begun to emerge as
vendors explore the requirements for offering bundled
services using DSL and a single copper pair. Technology
demonstrations of NG-IAD and voice gateway products
working together have provided proof of concept.
Although there are limited equipment offerings that can
provide this functionality today, a number of options will
be available by next year and widespread adoption should
follow.

nwfusion.com



To: Mark Fowler who wrote (73787)8/15/1999 4:48:00 AM
From: H James Morris  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
Mark, @ the party I was at tonight was the Ceo of F5 (Ffiv).
I didn't have the balls to tell him I fled at 50. It appears that was my mistake.:-(
>>F5 NETWORKS INC COM(FFIV)
Bid: 54 3/8 BidSize: 1 Open: 48 1/16
Ask: 54 7/16 AskSize: 3 Close: 45 1/2
Last: 54 7/16 High: 54 5/8 Div.: 0.00
Change: +8 15/16 Low: 48 Yield: 0.00
A.High: 85 P/E: 0.00 Volume: 830800
A.Low: 10 1/8 EPS: 0.00 Market :NASDAQ NM<<
Do you know that F5 and Jnpr will be the next Cisco, unless Cisco buys them out?
Please don't trust me on that. Never believe what you hear at a wine tasting party.:-)