potetskrell Skrevet 29. september 2004 Del Skrevet 29. september 2004 (endret) Hvordan åpner jeg porter på min router som jeg ikke vet navnet på. vet ikke om den kan kalles en router engang. det er slik at vi får intrenett gjennom fiberoptikk, dette går da inn i en boks på veggen og derfra igjen til en gammel hub og til pcæene.. Skal ha meg ny router snart forsi den på veggen bare deler ut maks 3'iper.. Noen med forslag? Bruker bulletproof ftp og xp pro uten SP .. Edit: Hehe, Salten Bredbånd (vår isp) blir nevnt her http://www.cisco.com/japanese/warp/public/...ts_101603.shtml Forteller det dere noe Endret 29. september 2004 av Ingardj Lenke til kommentar
JarleW Skrevet 29. september 2004 Del Skrevet 29. september 2004 (endret) Edit: Hehe, Salten Bredbånd (vår isp) blir nevnt her http://www.cisco.com/japanese/warp/public/...ts_101603.shtml Forteller det dere noe Ja, dette : Feature Article ITU Telecom World 2003 Special: MPLS Developments Underscore Cisco Commitment to Service Providers Cisco has strengthened its portfolio with an offering aimed at a service provider community increasingly hungry for MPLS October 16, 2003 By Jason Deign, News@Cisco Cisco Systems® has reinforced its commitment to service providers at ITU Telecom World 2003 by unveiling Cisco IOS MPLS Bandwidth-Assured Layer 2 Services. The development allows service providers to provide consistent bandwidth guarantees for end customer sites no matter what type of Layer 2 protocol is being used to connect the site in the first-mile access network. This builds on existing Cisco innovations in Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS). It takes advantage of the MPLS infrastructure that service providers have already built for delivering Layer 3 VPNs. Plus it enhances the capabilities of Cisco Any Transport over MPLS (AToM), which already allows service providers to reduce their operational cost by transporting any type of Layer 2 traffic over a single converged IP/MPLS core network. The launch of Cisco MPLS Bandwidth-Assured Layer 2 Services is highly significant for service providers that want to roll out flexible and cost-effective services to customers using Ethernet technologies, but have been held back by the need to maintain traditional Layer 2 services for certain customer sites or by the complexity of building and managing all kinds of gateways to connect their heterogeneous networks. Cisco MPLS Bandwidth-Assured Layer 2 Services, which includes enhancements to AToM, make it possible for service providers to deliver Frame Relay, ATM and Ethernet services with consistent bandwidth and Quality of Service guarantees, in conjunction with an IP/MPLS core infrastructure. On top of this basic Layer 2 connectivity, enterprises want their individual sites to be logically connected as one consistent single network - and either choose to build a VPN themselves, or buy it as a managed service from their service provider. According to IDC, 53 percent of enterprise customers currently buy Layer 2 services so they can build their own VPNs, versus 47 percent who are happy to buy Layer 3 managed IP-VPNs from service providers. While IDC expects the level of customers that are building IP VPNs themselves to drop to 36 percent in 2005, it still represents a major portion of service providers' business. The recent developments from Cisco will help service providers support this business by providing them with the means to offer bandwidth guarantees whichever way the customer wants to procure a VPN. The MPLS core provides the flexibility for service providers to support these differing requirements - and MPLS is rapidly becoming established as the de facto standard for converged networks. The number of service providers coming to Cisco, the market leader, for the technology has doubled over the past year, to 200. Many large service providers are keen to offer Ethernet services to their enterprise customers as the technology takes a hold across Europe. It is not just traditional service providers that are leading the shift towards Ethernet. Many, in fact, are being prompted by regional deployments from utilities and municipalities, which have taken a leading role in the delivery of pure Ethernet broadband services over a fiber-to-the home infrastructure. In Geneva, for example, the utilities company Services Industriels de Genève (SIG) has selected Metro Ethernet switching technology from Cisco to support an innovative next-generation broadband project in the Charmilles district. Charmilles' residents will now have access to broadband at 10 Mbps - roughly 20 times the speed of standard DSL - right into their apartments. The project will open up 10 Mbps connectivity to 53 apartment blocks, 1,000 flats and 40 shopping arcades up to the end of 2003, with the aim of fostering greater interactivity between citizens in the district. "SIG is working with the local government of Geneva to develop a new broadband model for the Charmilles area which aims to promote greater interactivity between citizens and hopefully an enhanced standard of living," says Raymond Battistella, Chief Executive Officer of SIG. "We also decided to develop our own fiber infrastructure, which will provide us with a way of coping with greater demand in the future. "In the year that Geneva hosts the world's premier telecoms show, we believe this project demonstrates that next-generation Ethernet broadband is becoming a pre-requisite for cities wanting to attract the interest of forward-thinking organizations." SIG is using underground utility ducts to lay 'last kilometer' fiber to basement Points of Presence where Cisco Catalyst® 4500 Series switches help provide Ethernet-based broadband connectivity to individual apartments and businesses in the Charmilles Centre Commercial. Fiber is then used in the 'last meter' inside the apartment blocks to connect apartments, shops and businesses to these Cisco switches. SIG is currently providing local interest content using a web-based streaming format, but aims to extend full IP-based voice and video services such as video on demand over the basic Ethernet broadband connectivity, and take advantage of revenue-generating services in the future. In a similar vein, Salten Bredbånd AS is rolling out an Ethernet to the Home network in the Nordland region of Northern Norway. Salten Bredbånd has already deployed an MPLS-based core infrastructure to support business and public administration customers and is extending this network with new fiber to support residential customers in apartments and individual homes. Using Cisco Metro Ethernet Switching and a fibre optic network, Salten Bredbånd will provide residential and business customers with 10 Mbps Internet, voice over IP and interactive video services over a single converged network. Salten Bredbånd is using existing tubes, ducts and rights of way from its energy utility parent companies to help extend the fibre cost-effectively to households and reduce the overall digging requirement. The broadband operator is also working closely with the Fauske Kommune to bring the benefits of Ethernet broadband to the regional public authorities. "We studied other models in Italy and Sweden and decided that deploying triple play services from day one was most attractive both in terms of our service offer for customers and from our overall business model," says Tom Erik Jaeger, marketing director for Salten Bredbånd. "Being able to offer Internet connectivity, telephony services and video over a single converged network also reduces the operational costs for each of our services compared with traditional networks." Jason Deign is a freelance writer based in Barcelona, Spain. Endret 29. september 2004 av JarleW Lenke til kommentar
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