AT&T testing system that will be able to offer downloads of up to 322Terabits per second
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AT&T testing system that will be able to offer downloads of up to 322Terabits per second
AT&T and Cisco have been testing a network routing system that will be
able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second.
Cisco unveils ultra-fast Internet technology
By David Goldman, staff writerMarch 9, 2010: 12:48 PM ET
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Cisco unveiled a new Internet technology
Tuesday that it says will provide the ultra-fast data speeds necessary
to stay ahead of users' rapidly growing online video demands.
The new technology, known as "CRS-3," is a network routing system that
will be able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second,
according to the company.
Translation: Well in Cisco terms, the router will be able to provide
download speeds of 1 Gigabit per second for everyone in San Francisco,
download the entire printed collection of the Library of Congress in 1
second and stream every movie ever created in less than 4 minutes.
Re: AT&T testing system that will be able to offer downloads of upto 322 Terabits per second
FUTURE SHOCK: iPad Protected by 200 Patents wrote:
> AT&T and Cisco have been testing a network routing system that will be
> able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second.
>
> Cisco unveils ultra-fast Internet technology
> By David Goldman, staff writerMarch 9, 2010: 12:48 PM ET
>
>
> NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Cisco unveiled a new Internet technology
> Tuesday that it says will provide the ultra-fast data speeds necessary
> to stay ahead of users' rapidly growing online video demands.
>
> The new technology, known as "CRS-3," is a network routing system that
> will be able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second,
> according to the company.
>
> Translation: Well in Cisco terms, the router will be able to provide
> download speeds of 1 Gigabit per second for everyone in San Francisco,
> download the entire printed collection of the Library of Congress in 1
> second and stream every movie ever created in less than 4 minutes.
>
> read more...
>
> http://money.cnn.com/2010/03/09/tech...isco_internet/
>
>
> No mention of Verizon and their creaky technology being involved in
> these tests.
>
> Like the map indicates Verizon's CDMA 3G is like the smell of urine in
> the New York Subway, it seems to be everywhere.
I don't actually need those speeds. I'm inclined to doubt that any
existing phone has the capability to handle 322 Terabits per second or
to store one second's worth of data at that rate.
Re: AT&T testing system that will be able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second
"Richard B. Gilbert" <rgilbert88@comcast.net> wrote in
news:t4ednYTCaM4dMAvWnZ2dnUVZ_gSdnZ2d@giganews.com :
> I don't actually need those speeds. I'm inclined to doubt that any
> existing phone has the capability to handle 322 Terabits per second or
> to store one second's worth of data at that rate.
>
Sorta puts a whole new perspective on why the son-of-a-*****es want $60 for
5GB, doesn't it?
--
"iPad is to computing what Etch-A-Sketch is to art!"
Re: AT&T testing system that will be able to offer downloads of upto 322 Terabits per second
On 3/9/2010 3:10 PM, FUTURE SHOCK: iPad Protected by 200 Patents wrote:
> AT&T and Cisco have been testing a network routing system that will be
> able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second.
>
> Cisco unveils ultra-fast Internet technology
> By David Goldman, staff writerMarch 9, 2010: 12:48 PM ET
>
>
Wow, you have certainly proved you are the naive little fanboi.
Apparently you don't quite get the difference between a PR style "we are
testing something" and an actual "we have installed something and it is
available for use"
Re: AT&T testing system that will be able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second
"FUTURE SHOCK: iPad Protected by 200 Patents" <vic.healey@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:6889c82d-a56f-4be2-83e7-c54b4ef1e489@u9g2000yqb.googlegroups.com...
> AT&T and Cisco have been testing a network routing system that will be
> able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second.
>
> Cisco unveils ultra-fast Internet technology
> By David Goldman, staff writerMarch 9, 2010: 12:48 PM ET
>
>
> NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Cisco unveiled a new Internet technology
> Tuesday that it says will provide the ultra-fast data speeds necessary
> to stay ahead of users' rapidly growing online video demands.
>
> The new technology, known as "CRS-3," is a network routing system that
> will be able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second,
> according to the company.
>
> Translation: Well in Cisco terms, the router will be able to provide
> download speeds of 1 Gigabit per second for everyone in San Francisco,
> download the entire printed collection of the Library of Congress in 1
> second and stream every movie ever created in less than 4 minutes.
>
> read more...
>
> http://money.cnn.com/2010/03/09/tech...isco_internet/
>
>
> No mention of Verizon and their creaky technology being involved in
> these tests.
>
> Like the map indicates Verizon's CDMA 3G is like the smell of urine in
> the New York Subway, it seems to be everywhere.
Are you really that incredibly stupid Vic???
I am personally quite familiar with tier 1 wireless carrier's data centers. (just in one yesterday)
Trust me, there is plenty of Cisco gear in every one of them - and not just AT&T's.
If you had ANY clue, you would see just how embarrassingly stupid this last post was.
Re: AT&T testing system that will be able to offer downloads of up to322 Terabits per second
On Mar 11, 1:42*am, "Ness-Net" <richard.nod...@nessnet.spam.com>
wrote:
> "FUTURE SHOCK: iPad Protected by 200 Patents" <vic.hea...@gmail.com> wrote in messagenews:6889c82d-a56f-4be2-83e7-c54b4ef1e489@u9g2000yqb.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
> > AT&T and Cisco have been testing a network routing system that will be
> > able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second.
>
> > Cisco unveils ultra-fast Internet technology
> > By David Goldman, staff writerMarch 9, 2010: 12:48 PM ET
>
> > NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Cisco unveiled a new Internet technology
> > Tuesday that it says will provide the ultra-fast data speeds necessary
> > to stay ahead of users' rapidly growing online video demands.
>
> > The new technology, known as "CRS-3," is a network routing system that
> > will be able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second,
> > according to the company.
>
> > Translation: Well in Cisco terms, the router will be able to provide
> > download speeds of 1 Gigabit per second for everyone in San Francisco,
> > download the entire printed collection of the Library of Congress in 1
> > second and stream every movie ever created in less than 4 minutes.
>
> > read more...
>
> >http://money.cnn.com/2010/03/09/tech...isco_internet/
>
> > No mention of Verizon and their creaky technology being involved in
> > these tests.
>
> > Like the map indicates Verizon's CDMA 3G is like the smell of urine in
> > the New York Subway, it seems to be everywhere.
>
> Are you really that incredibly stupid Vic???
> I am personally quite familiar with tier 1 wireless carrier's data centers. (just in one yesterday)
> Trust me, there is plenty of Cisco gear in every one of them - and not just AT&T's.
>
> If you had ANY clue, you would *see just how embarrassingly stupid thislast post was.
Verizon isn't testing this new backbone router, only AT&T is. AT&T has
the need to handle the increased load from all the Apple mobile
devices.
Verizon's creaky CDMA 3G is like the smell of urine in the New York
Subway, it seems to be everywhere.
Re: AT&T testing system that will be able to offer downloads of upto 322 Terabits per second
On 3/11/2010 7:16 AM, AT&T USA's fastest 3G with iPhone and iPad wrote:
> On Mar 11, 1:42 am, "Ness-Net"<richard.nod...@nessnet.spam.com>
> wrote:
>> "FUTURE SHOCK: iPad Protected by 200 Patents"<vic.hea...@gmail.com> wrote in messagenews:6889c82d-a56f-4be2-83e7-c54b4ef1e489@u9g2000yqb.googlegroups.com...
>>
>>
>>
>>> AT&T and Cisco have been testing a network routing system that will be
>>> able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second.
>>
>>> Cisco unveils ultra-fast Internet technology
>>> By David Goldman, staff writerMarch 9, 2010: 12:48 PM ET
>>
>>> NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Cisco unveiled a new Internet technology
>>> Tuesday that it says will provide the ultra-fast data speeds necessary
>>> to stay ahead of users' rapidly growing online video demands.
>>
>>> The new technology, known as "CRS-3," is a network routing system that
>>> will be able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second,
>>> according to the company.
>>
>>> Translation: Well in Cisco terms, the router will be able to provide
>>> download speeds of 1 Gigabit per second for everyone in San Francisco,
>>> download the entire printed collection of the Library of Congress in 1
>>> second and stream every movie ever created in less than 4 minutes.
>>
>>> read more...
>>
>>> http://money.cnn.com/2010/03/09/tech...isco_internet/
>>
>>> No mention of Verizon and their creaky technology being involved in
>>> these tests.
>>
>>> Like the map indicates Verizon's CDMA 3G is like the smell of urine in
>>> the New York Subway, it seems to be everywhere.
>>
>> Are you really that incredibly stupid Vic???
>> I am personally quite familiar with tier 1 wireless carrier's data centers. (just in one yesterday)
>> Trust me, there is plenty of Cisco gear in every one of them - and not just AT&T's.
>>
>> If you had ANY clue, you would see just how embarrassingly stupid this last post was.
>
> Verizon isn't testing this new backbone router, only AT&T is. AT&T has
> the need to handle the increased load from all the Apple mobile
> devices.
You really are amazingly clueless. Please explain how one company
issuing a press release means that *no one* is doing anything?
>
> Verizon's creaky CDMA 3G is like the smell of urine in the New York
> Subway, it seems to be everywhere.
"AT&T USA's fastest 3G with iPhone and iPad" <vic.nospam@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:249a1cee-1e94-48e4-a224-d52ab5b43b44@q23g2000yqd.googlegroups.com...
> On Mar 11, 1:42 am, "Ness-Net" <richard.nod...@nessnet.spam.com>
> wrote:
>> "FUTURE SHOCK: iPad Protected by 200 Patents" <vic.hea...@gmail.com> wrote in
>> messagenews:6889c82d-a56f-4be2-83e7-c54b4ef1e489@u9g2000yqb.googlegroups.com...
>>
>>
>>
>> > AT&T and Cisco have been testing a network routing system that will be
>> > able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second.
>>
>> > Cisco unveils ultra-fast Internet technology
>> > By David Goldman, staff writerMarch 9, 2010: 12:48 PM ET
>>
>> > NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Cisco unveiled a new Internet technology
>> > Tuesday that it says will provide the ultra-fast data speeds necessary
>> > to stay ahead of users' rapidly growing online video demands.
>>
>> > The new technology, known as "CRS-3," is a network routing system that
>> > will be able to offer downloads of up to 322 Terabits per second,
>> > according to the company.
>>
>> > Translation: Well in Cisco terms, the router will be able to provide
>> > download speeds of 1 Gigabit per second for everyone in San Francisco,
>> > download the entire printed collection of the Library of Congress in 1
>> > second and stream every movie ever created in less than 4 minutes.
>>
>> > read more...
>>
>> >http://money.cnn.com/2010/03/09/tech...isco_internet/
>>
>> > No mention of Verizon and their creaky technology being involved in
>> > these tests.
>>
>> > Like the map indicates Verizon's CDMA 3G is like the smell of urine in
>> > the New York Subway, it seems to be everywhere.
>>
>> Are you really that incredibly stupid Vic???
>> I am personally quite familiar with tier 1 wireless carrier's data centers. (just in one yesterday)
>> Trust me, there is plenty of Cisco gear in every one of them - and not just AT&T's.
>>
>> If you had ANY clue, you would see just how embarrassingly stupid this last post was.
>
> Verizon isn't testing this new backbone router, only AT&T is. AT&T has
> the need to handle the increased load from all the Apple mobile
> devices.
>
> Verizon's creaky CDMA 3G is like the smell of urine in the New York
> Subway, it seems to be everywhere.
You really ARE an idiot aren't you? Thank you for continuing to prove it - again.
First hint: did you actually SEE "wireless" mentioned in any of your references??
You DO know that there actually is a global tier 1 called AT&T don't you??
You thinking that your idiotic rant had anything to do with wireless shows you complete
lack of any actual knowledge on the subject.
....it's a little hard to see how this product alone will have much impact on wireless. And the reason for this is
the requirement that we also consider the remainder of the product and service value chain that links handsets
in the field with whatever the users of those handsets seek to connect to. Considering just the variable nature
of the physical layer of wireless connections, limited base station capacity, and limited backhaul capacity, it's not
hard to be reminded of the old saying regarding chains being only as good as their weakest link. And, of course, .
the same goes for networks. How long will it take for the wireless operators to build out the rest of their networks
to match this new capacity at the core, and for enough of this capacity to exist in enough markets so that business .
3users can rely this availability - what I call critical mass? Don't hold your breath. Progress is being made, but, as
has historically been the case, it will be slow.
So, sure, while the CRS-3 might indeed provide enough core capacity for "every man, woman and child in
China to make a video call, simultaneously," those users won't be doing that over a wireless network anytime soon.