SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Cisco Systems, Inc. (CSCO) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: StockMan who wrote (12620)2/23/1998 9:01:00 AM
From: Perry  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 77400
 
Monday February 23, 8:05 am Eastern Time

Company Press Release

Cisco Debuts High-Availability, Carrier-Class Universal Access
Server

Cisco AS5800 Enables Service Providers to Offer New, Differentiated Services

SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 23, 1998--Cisco Systems, Inc. today announced the
Cisco AS5800 carrier-class universal access server, a highly available solution for large dial points
of presence (POPs) in a single, integrated product. Delivering on the vision of telephony-scale data
networks, the Cisco AS5800 is specifically designed to meet the demands of large-scale service
providers such as PTTs, RBOCs, CLECs, IXCs and large ISPs.

DASA Architecture for Resilience, Flexibility and High Performance

The Cisco AS5800 is the newest component of the Dial Access Stacking Architecture (DASA),
thereby enabling it to be stacked with other Cisco AS5800s, AS5300s or AS5200s to create
resilient, flexible, high-performance, manageable and cost-optimized solutions for any size dial
pool. By using DASA, the Cisco AS5200, AS5300 and the new AS5800 access servers are all
available as part of the AccessPath(TM) integrated access system. Network architects can now
deploy port densities of more than 10,000 simultaneous connections in a single telco hunt group.

The Cisco AS5X00 and AccessPath families provide the largest range of dial solutions available
today, from 2 to 500 Primary Rate Interfaces (PRIs). All support Cisco IOS(TM) software and
offer common user interfaces, management tools and network services, enabling customers to
choose the correct product for different parts of their networks without sacrificing the benefit of
consistent operations and services. By providing the industry's broadest family of compatible
products, Cisco enables customers to pick the right starting point for a ''pay-as-you-grow'' rollout
without compromising future capabilities.

''5nines: 5minutes'' Availability Meets Service Provider Requirements

Service providers require high availability and carrier-class management for their complex dial
POPs. The NEBS level 3- and European ETSI-compliant Cisco AS5800 has a Bellcore-recognized
mean time between failure (MTBF) of greater than 500,000 hours. Equipped with hot-swappable
cards, power and blower assemblies, redundant and load-sharing power supplies, fans and modems,
the Cisco AS5800 provides availability at 99.999 percent -- a figure which equates to less than five
minutes of downtime per year. For even higher availability, the Cisco AS5200, AS5300 and the
new AS5800 are all available as part of AccessPath integrated solutions that deliver 6nines or
99.99998 percent availability.

''Carriers are notoriously demanding in their requirements and specifications for central-office
equipment -- and these demands now extend to remote access,'' said Brad Baldwin, Director of
Remote Access at IDC. ''Cisco's AS5800 easily meets IDC's list of carrier-class requirements
believed fundamental in delivering true carrier-class remote access servers to these
highly-available, scalable, mission-critical environments.''

Carrier-Class System Management

Delivered as an option with the Cisco AS5800, major enhancements to the Cisco System Controller
include the Expression MIB, Health Monitor and Bulk Transfer MIB. These Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMP) extensions allow the network operator to monitor an entire POP of
dial ports with a minimum of polling and network traffic. Detailed polling data can be stored
locally for later retrieval if necessary. For easy troubleshooting, Cisco has added a conditional
debug facility, allowing a debug command to be triggered by a specific event, such as a user ID or
phone number, and turning on debug for the affected port only, enabling rapid identification and
resolution of problems.

Enables Service Providers to Offer New and Differentiated Services

Cisco IOS software provides unequaled support and enhancements for networking protocols. The
mature and robust support provided by scalable Cisco IOS technologies enables service providers to
offer new, competitive services beyond Internet dial, including virtual private networks (VPNs),
multiple service levels, detailed billing and network gaming. Cisco IOS support on the Cisco
AS5800 provides increased scalability to address thousands of interfaces and contains specific
features to improve the management and deployment of wholesale dial services by service
providers. Continuing the momentum that Cisco has established in data/voice/video integration, the
Cisco AS5800 will be voice-over-IP- and fax-over-IP-enabled.

Scalable Performance; Wealth of Proven Interfaces

Multiple proven high-speed processors enable the Cisco AS5800 to easily sustain 720 concurrent
sessions at or near line speed. The Cisco AS5800 can be configured with up to 24 T1/E1 PRI
interfaces, each with integrated Channel Service Units (CSUs), and has been designed to grow to
twice that capacity within 1998.

Using the same Versatile Interface Processor (VIP) port adapters as the Cisco 7000, 7200 and 7500
series products, the Cisco AS5800 ships with the widest range of network interfaces in the market.
These include Fast Ethernet, Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI), High-Speed Serial Interface
(HSSI), DS3, E3 and Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) OC-3 among others.

SS7 Makes Cisco Part of the Public Switched Network with Cost Savings

Carriers worldwide need Signaling System Number 7 (SS7) to integrate dial access into their
network infrastructures -- to reduce costs, offload voice switches, realize new revenue
opportunities and scale their networks cost-effectively. Cisco's recent acquisition of LightSpeed
International brings the core technology to provide SS7 signaling protocols and interfaces to
Cisco's carrier-class dial platforms, including the AS5800. With SS7, carriers can offer dial
outsourcing services with, in many cases, 50 percent lower capital costs compared with PRI
solutions, while scaling to central-office sized POPs of well over 10,000 ports.

MICA Modems for Cisco AS5800; Support for V.90

The Cisco AS5800 universal access server benefits from advanced Modem ISDN Channel
Aggregation (MICA(TM)) technologies. Digital modem technology offers ''any-to-any''
multisession functionality for current analog modem standards, including K56Flex, supplying
value-added functions for ISDN channels and Channelized E1/T1. These modems have a free
software upgrade to the recently introduced ITU V.90 draft specification, which is designed to
upgrade current K56flex and x2 modems to a new interoperable standard for 56-kbps connectivity.

Pricing and Availability

The Cisco AS5800 is orderable immediately at a U.S. list price starting at $515/port.

About Cisco Systems

Cisco Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ:CSCO) is the worldwide leader in networking for the Internet.
News and information are available at cisco.com.

-0-

Note to Editors: AccessPath, Cisco IOS and MICA are trademarks, and Cisco, Cisco Systems and
the Cisco Systems logo are registered trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. in the U.S. and certain
other countries. All other trademarks mentioned in this document are the property of their
respective owners.

Contact:

Cisco Systems, Inc.
Clare Whitecross, 408/525-2957
cwhitecr@cisco.com



To: StockMan who wrote (12620)2/23/1998 9:48:00 AM
From: Scott C. Lemon  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 77400
 
Hello StockMan,

Re -- There are a number of companies that are now shipping
commercial implementations ... Netscape, Network Appliance, and
Sun ...


> Go back to your first post on this topic. Quick Web, and other
> cacheing schemes do not make reliable wirespeed layer 3
> unnecessary, to the contrary it emphasises the need for it.

I'm not sure that I understand your perspective on this. In my lab experiments and research we are installing object caches to piggy-back existing routers. In these scenarios we are seeing a drastic reduction of routed packet traffic. The object caches route objects between each other using the point-to-point connections that the routers are also using to communicate.

Can you provide more detail and/or references to your analysis? I'd like to better understand your perspective ...

Thanx!

Scott C. Lemon

Stockman