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Strategies & Market Trends : Rande Is . . . HOME -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rande Is who wrote (36394)9/26/2000 2:41:34 PM
From: fastcats  Respond to of 57584
 
More on CMNT (mentioned yesterday).

Message 14458098

Great thread. Hope this helps.

fc



To: Rande Is who wrote (36394)9/26/2000 3:16:59 PM
From: mike machi  Respond to of 57584
 
George Mason University's Advanced Internet Lab Tests Interoperability
of MPLS Products by Avici, Cisco and Juniper

FAIRFAX, Va., Sep 26, 2000 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- The Advanced Internet Lab at
George Mason University has completed a leading-edge code test period for the
interoperability of Multi-Protocol Label Switching-Traffic Engineering products.
Participating vendors were Avici Systems Inc., Cisco Systems and Juniper
Networks. The tests, which involved Avici's Terabit Switch Router, Cisco's 12008
Gigabit Switch Router and Juniper's M20(TM) Internet backbone router, were the
first to publicly demonstrate MPLS-TE interoperability between the products.

"MPLS will have a profound effect on Internet routing architecture and data
traffic engineering for the Next Generation Internet," says Bijan Jabbari,
director of the laboratory and a faculty member in the department of electrical
and computer engineering at George Mason's School of Information Technology and
Engineering. "These test results indicate the companies understand the issues
relevant to interoperability and are dealing with them effectively."

"Avici Systems recognizes the importance of demonstrating MPLS interoperability
to our customers," says Chris Gunner, Avici vice president of engineering. "We
believe MPLS technology will be a key technology to our customers' abilities to
support new revenue-generating services and take advantage of the growth of IP
data networks," he says. "AIL provides a forum to demonstrate MPLS-traffic
engineering implementations from leading suppliers in the service-provider
market and demonstrate their stability."

"With increasing numbers of vendors supporting MPLS, interoperability becomes a
necessity in multivendor networks," says Azhar Sayeed, Cisco product manager for
MPLS. "Cisco has participated successfully in several interoperability tests and
will continue to do so in order to demonstrate and provide standards compliance
implementations. AIL has created a forum with very comprehensive testing
capabilities that checks for compliance of vendor implementations in the area of
traffic engineering and other MPLS applications."

The purpose of George Mason's Advanced Internet Lab is to conduct research on
high-performance, large-bandwidth Internet core networks. In addition to the
initial support provided by UUNET, a WorldCom company, the lab is supported by
France Telecom, Deutsche Telekom, Avici, Alcatel, Cisco, Ericsson, Juniper,
Marconi Communications, Nortel Networks, Spirent Communications (Adtech and
Netcom Systems) and Ixia.