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Technology Stocks : Ascend Communications (ASND) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: djane who wrote (45263)4/24/1998 10:04:00 AM
From: The Phoenix  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 61433
 
Could it be that I'm posting and article before djane could get to it? <g> Just found this...

Network World, 4/20/98

Cambridge, Mass. - GTE Internetworking is beefing up
its Internet backbone by building new facilities that will
offer users significantly more bandwidth and enhanced
quality-of-service (QoS) features.

GTE Internetworking, GTE Corp.'s Internet service
provider subsidiary, earlier this month announced it will
deploy Ascend Communications, Inc. ATM and frame
relay switches throughout the ISPs new Internet
backbone network, called the Global Network
Infrastructure (GNI).

Initially, the ISP will roll out 30 Ascend B-STDX 9000,
CBX 500 and GX 550 carrier-grade frame relay,
multiservice and ATM switches, respectively. The
devices will be used throughout GTE Internetworking's
sites in nearly 30 cities.

GTE Internetworking also is rolling out Ascend's IP
Navigator software, which can support IP virtual private
networks (VPN) across the switches with guaranteed
QoS. IP Navigator will let network administrators map
IP quality requests over frame relay and ATM
connections.

IP Navigator can be supplemented by Navis, Ascend's
network management software that allows
drag-and-drop provisioning of VPNs as well as
enhanced network management and accounting. Navis
also can enable a service that lets customers get a
glimpse of how their circuits are performing.

The ISP plans to use Ascend's QoS software tools to
offer users better service-level agreements and
guarantees in the future, said Ken Baldwin, assistant vice
president of market management at GTE
Internetworking.

It's imperative that GTE Internetworking and other ISPs
and telcos build higher bandwidth networks with the
latest switching technology in order to stay competitive,
said Eric Paulak, research director at Gartner Group,
Inc., a Stamford, Conn.-based consulting firm.

GTE has been throwing resources behind building a
second Internet backbone network since the ISP
acquired BBN Corp. almost one year ago.

While GTE is not eliminating the original BBN network,
which maxes out at OC-3 speeds, the ISP will instead
interconnect the new OC-192 GNI when that network
goes online.

The Ascend switches are the latest addition to GTE
Internetworking's GNI. The ISP has already purchased
Synchronous Optical Network (SONET) gear from
Nortel and 15,000 miles of OC-192 route fiber miles
from Qwest Communications Corp.

The GNI is expected to be completed by the end of
1999.