To: w2j2 who wrote (551 ) 11/17/1997 2:31:00 PM From: Maverick Respond to of 1629
MAE-East congestion seems a good opportunity for ASND WorldCom and the ISPs have identified the problems as head-of-line blocking, which causes pipes into the exchange point to jam up, resulting in packets being dropped, and congestion. Dropped packets mean ISPs have to dedicate more resources to retransmitting, which, in turn, wastes bandwidth. Nowhere is the dramatic growth of the Internet felt more strongly than at WorldCom's MAE-East, in Vienna, Va.; the busiest MAE. Packet loss at MAE-East has recently approached 40%. As a result ISPs that link to the MAE to exchange traffic with other ISPs are screaming for upgrades. WorldCom, which got the job of fixing the MAEs when it bought original architect MFS Communications Co., Inc., has answered the call with more Digital Equipment Corp. FDDI GIGAswitches, but most observers believe FDDI's days are numbered. Past and present Less than four years ago, MAE-East had a single GIGAswitch. Today, it has seven - three of them deployed this year as the first part of the MAEs' overhaul. To put further packet loss at bay, MAE technicians recently revamped the MAE-East architecture. What was simply a ring of GIGAswitches strung together has been rearchitected to a mesh formation with one switch at the core. "We've also dispersed high-load customers to reduce the stress on a single switch," said Larry Walberg, director of global network operations at WorldCom. Despite these fixes, WorldCom believes MAE-East still will reach full capacity by January, said Dan Lasater, vice president of broadband applications at WorldCom. But if even one exchange point is going to reach full capacity in a handful of months, why invest millions in FDDI? This question has many scratching their heads. There are really only three technology choices for MAE and NAP operators today -- ATM, Gigabit Ethernet and IP over Synchronous Optical Network (SONET), said Tim Weingarten, research associate at BancAmerica Robertson Stephens, a San Francisco-based consulting firm.