Title: World Tour
1PREMIER SPONSORS
GOLD SPONSOR
2Welcome!
- Kevin Vachon
- Chief Operating Officer
- MEF
3MEF Mission Areas of Work
- Accelerate the worldwide adoption of Carrier
Ethernet networks and services
Specifications and Liaison
Marketing Carrier Ethernet
Certification Programs
4Carrier Ethernet Scope of MEF Work
HD TV, TVoD, VoD, Content Providers
Voice/Video Telephony
Internet information Software apps
Host applications, Consolidated Servers
Gaming, DR, ERP
Video Source
Carrier Ethernet
Carrier Ethernet wire-line and mobile
backhaul with copper, fiber , cable, wireless
access network delivery
5MEF Membership 153 Companies
Aug 2008
- Membership doubled over 2 years
- Active involvement in Forum workgroups
Service Provider, Cable/MSO Members
- AboveNet
- Alpheus Communications
- ATT
- Belgacom
- Bell Canada
- Bright House Networks
- British Telecom
- Cable Wireless
- Charter Communications
- China Telecom
- Cincinnati Bell
- Colt
- Comcast
- Cox Business
- Demand Broadband
- Embarq
- Global Crossing
- IPC
- KDDI RD Laboratories
- PCCW
- PT Inovação
- PT Prime
- Qwest Communications
- RCN Business Solutions
- Reliance Communications
- Rogers
- Shanghai Information Network
- Singapore Telecom
- Sprint
- Suddenlink
- Swisscom
- Symphony Communication
- TATA Communications
- Telecom Italia
- Telekom Malaysia
- Teliasonera AB
- Telus
- Time Warner Cable
Equipment Vendors, Software Test Companies, Lab
Members
- Accedian Networks
- Actelis Networks
- Adtran
- Adva Optical Networking
- Aethera Networks
- Agilent Technologies
- Aktino
- Alcatel- Lucent
- Alloptic
- ANDA Networks
- ARRIS International
- Atrica
- Aurora Networks
- Axerra Networks
- Bay Microsystems
- Broadcom
- BTI Photonics
- CableLabs
- Calix
- Dowslake Microsystems
- DragonWave
- EANTC
- ECI Telecom
- Ericsson
- Ethos Networks
- EXFO
- Extreme Networks
- FibroLAN
- FiberHome Technologies
- Fluke Networks
- Foundry Networks
- Fujitsu Network Communications
- Gridpoint Systems
- Hammerhead Systems
- Harris Stratex
- Hatteras Networks
- Hitachi Cable
- Huawei Technologies
- JDSU
- Juniper Networks
- Lightstorm Networks
- Maipu Communications
- Matisse Networks
- Maxim
- Motorola
- MRV Communications
- Nakina Systems
- NEC
- Nokia Siemens Networks
- Nortel Networks Corp.
- Occam Networks
- Omnitron Systems
- Overture Networks
- Qosera
- PCT International
- RAD Data Communications
- Raisecom
- Spirent Communications
- Starhub
- Sunrise Telecom
- T Pack
- Tejas Networks
- Telco Systems
- Telcordia Technologies
- Telecommunication Metrology Center
- Tellabs
- Telrad Networks
- Transition Networks
- Transmode Optical
- Transwitch Corporation
- Turin Networks
- UNH-IOL
- UTStarcom
- Vitesse
- Wipro
- Wintegra
5
6Specifications Timeline 2001 2008Approved MEF
Specifications
MEF 16
MEF 4
MEF 7
MEF 12
ELMI
Architecture
EMS-NMS
Architecture
MEF 6.1
MEF 10.1
MEF 11
MEF 15
Ethernet Service Definitions Phase 2
MEF 2
Service AttributesPhase 2
MEF 17
Protection
UNI Framework
Management
Service OAM
2001-3
2006
2005
2004
2007
2008
MEF 13
MEF 18
MEF 20 UNI Type 2 MEF 21 UNI Type 2 Test Suite
Part 1
MEF 3
MEF 10
UNI-IA
Circuit Emulation Services Test Suite
Circuit Emulation
Service Attributes Phase 1
MEF 14
MEF 19
Traffic Management Test Suite
UNI Type 1 Test Suite
MEF 6
MEF 8
Circuit Emulation
Service Definitions
MEF 9
Services Test Suite
7MEF Certification Programs
- Manufacturer and Service Provider Certification
- Certification for Carrier Ethernet equipment
supplied to service providers - Certification of service provider services to
assure customers that service they are using
Carrier Ethernet services compliant with MEF
specifications
TM
- Certification Programs for MEF 9, 14 and 18
- Service certification to MEF 9 and MEF 14 for
equipment manufacturers and service providers - Circuit Emulation Services over Ethernet to MEF
18 for equipment manufacturers
8MEF Certified Companies
Aug 2008
Growth Continues 70 Certified Services, 400
Certified Systems, 1000s tests
22 Service Providers Certified
MEF Certification Lab
65 Equipment Manufacturers Certified
9www.metroethernetforum.org
10MEF Tools Unique Global Services Directory
- Business Users
- Find Carrier Ethernet services anywhere in the
world. - Service Providers
- Find a partner to build a global Carrier Ethernet
service. - Featuring
- Free access to interactive map driven system
- Latest information on available services
globally, locally - Launched with first 17 service providers,
- http//www.metroethernetforum.org/gsd
- Service Provider maintenance system
10
11The MEF Looking Forward
Enabling Fully Scalable Worldwide Operations
- New Specifications for Automated Management
- Automated management of the User-Network
Interface (UNI) (defined in MEF 20 7/08) and
related specifications in 2009 - Specifications for Worldwide Interconnect
- Ethernet Network to Network Interface (E-NNI) Q2
2009 - Other related Interconnect specifications
- Operational Tools
- Global Services Directory -on line and
interactive - Wholesales Access Interconnect Tools assist
provisioning - Bringing Ethernet Cost Model to Global Operations
- Major opportunity for cost savings in global
service level networks over legacy networks
12Business Drivers for Carrier Ethernet
- Phil Sayer
- Principal Analyst, Forrester Research
- Strategic Board Member, CMA
13(No Transcript)
14Forrester Research - Historical Snapshot
Forrester Research is an independent technology
research company that provides pragmatic and
forward-thinking advice about technologys impact
on business and consumers.
- Founded in 1983 by George Colony, FY2007 212M
- Profitable since inception, double digit revenue
growth the last four years - 1000 employees globally
- 350 research professionals
- Over 2300 clients world-wide
- 75 of the Fortune 100 are clients
15Leaders rely on Forrester every day
Proportion of Global Fortune 100 that are
Forrester clients
80 of the Global Fortune 100 companies are
current Forrester clients
Proportion of Global Fortune 100 that are
Forrester clients
16Agenda
- IT Trends
- Ethernet Adoption In Europe
- What Are Enterprises Saying?
- What Are Service Providers Saying?
- Recommendations
17Agenda
- IT Trends
- Ethernet Adoption In Europe
- What Are Enterprises Saying?
- What Are Service Providers Saying?
- Recommendations
18What is driving IT?
- Stay ahead of next generation data center
- technologies
- Consolidate IT for cost, efficiency, and
- simplification
- Deliver always-on, always-available
- infrastructure
- Enable user productivity through mobility
- Automate and simplify IT processes
- Maintain and optimize core IT systems
19What Business Issues Drive WAN Technology
Requirements?
- Cost pressures
- Data center consolidation and server
virtualization - Drives up traffic and performance requirements
- New apps unified communications, telepresence
- Site bandwidth goes up from 2 Mbps to 100Mbps
- At Rabobank it went straight up to 1 Gbps
- Security and compliance issues
- Availability, resilience without compromises
- Flexibility, speed of response
20Enterprises must constantly innovate WANs
- Enterprise data traffic growth in Europe forecast
to grow by 30 - 70 per annum to 2012 typically
doubling every 18 months - Tariffs fall by 5 10 per annum
- Without innovation, cost rise inexorably
- This is why carrier Ethernet is on every agenda
- But there is more to do
- Application acceleration and compression
- More efficient coding technologies eg for video
- Traffic migration to the Internet
21Agenda
- IT Trends
- Ethernet Adoption In Europe
- What Are Enterprises Saying?
- What Are Service Providers Saying?
- Recommendations
22Forresters Networks and Telecoms Survey
- Every year, Forrester surveys over 2000 SMBs and
Enterprises in N America and Europe about telecom
trends - Spending patterns
- Telecom project priorities
- Technology adoption
- Supplier preferences
- Sourcing strategies
23Network and telecom trends
- Almost all (93) European enterprises are
multisourcing and buying managed services (95). - MPLS (75), carrier Ethernet (70), and Internet
VPNs (98) are in mass adoption - Enterprise business communications
- VoIP is mainstream, and Unified comms and
collaboration are gaining momentum. - More video! Telepresence, desktop vc, video file
dowloads - Server consolidation is driving new network based
services application acceleration, WAFS,
network based security.
24Ethernet Services Are Outpacing MPLS in European
Enterprises
September 3, 2008 Ethernet Services Take Europe
By Storm
25What has happened over the last year?
- Ethernet deployment in Europe is up from 25 to
42 - The doubters are becoming convinced. In 2007, 37
of enterprises had no plans. 2008, down to 23. - Europe leads N America in Ethernet deployment by
14 percentage points. Why? Lower prices! - SMBs are joining the party. 38 have deployed
Ethernet access circuits and many are buying
E-Line services.
26Why are enterprises choosing Ethernet?
- Higher speeds
- 10 Gbps in metro areas, with 40 Gbps soon
- 1 Gbps nationally and between major capital
cities, 10 Gbps soon - Better prices
- Overall savings can be 20 to 30 compared with
MPLS and more! - Lower latency
- Figures as low as 6 ms RTD for 500 miles
- More control
- Better control over security, routing, and
network architecture - Lower CPE costs
- 1 Gbps switch cards are much cheaper than STM-1
interfaces
27Who is buying Ethernet?
- At the start finance driven by performance
- Then media driven by bandwidth, and business
services, looking to innovate - Now most sectors, driven by cost and innovation
- Retail/ wholesale
- Transport
- Public services
- Starting to get the message mining,
petrochemicals, manufacturing
28Single-sourcing global network services has lost
favor why?
- Single source deals dont deliver on
- Service
- Competitive Pricing
- Longer term market price tracking
- Innovation
- Commercial security
- Physical security
29Pros and cons of multisourcing WAN services
- For
- Better control of cost, service, flexibility
- Local market knowledge and local contacts
- Competition works best to spur good service
delivery at good price points. - Less risk not total dependence on a single
supplier its easier to change one supplier - Innovation
- The small guys do it better
- Against
- More in-house effort required for
- Network design and management of multivendor WANs
- Service management different SLAs, reporting,
billing - Contract governance
- Integration becomes the user companys
responsibility. - The customer gets caught in the middle of
finger-pointing.
30Ethernet and Multisourcing
- Multisourcing will favor
- Best of breed local infrastructure operators
- Service providers who offer innovative services
- Regional carriers with in-depth coverage
- Multisourcing will not favor
- Carriers who offer one-size-fits-all services
- Service providers who follow rather than lead
31What are enterprise strategies?
- Centralize sourcing and vendor management for the
global WAN, and standardize procurement and VM
practices across federated organizations. - Use regional providers where deep coverage is
needed and require NNIs with a global WAN
provider. - Negotiate flexible Ts Cs, and avoid minimum
annual revenue commitments. - Use more alternative and new access technologies.
32Managed service procurement trends
- Enterprises are buying managed telecoms from
system and network integrators as well as telcos - Growth of managed network (WAN LAN) services
48 are already using managed MPLS - VZB reports that 85 of its recent MPLS deals
are managed - Ethernet services must follow this trend too
33Agenda
- IT Trends
- Ethernet Adoption In Europe
- What Are Enterprises Saying?
- What Are Service Providers Saying?
- Recommendations
34What do enterprises say about Ethernet?
- We buy it wherever we can
- For high speed point-to-point links it is the
only choice - For access circuits it is the first choice
- Enterprises that try out E-LAN services like
them - Enterprises want
- CoS and SLAs at least as good as MPLS
- Supplier Interconnection agreements with service
transparency - The same service types and quality everywhere!
- E-ordering, reporting, billing, and trouble
ticketing
35Agenda
- IT Trends
- Ethernet Adoption In Europe
- What Are Enterprises Saying?
- What Are Service Providers Saying?
- Recommendations
36Alcatel-Lucent simple and cost-effective
37CW scalable, economic, robust
38Agenda
- IT Trends
- Ethernet Adoption In Europe
- What Are Enterprises Saying?
- What Are Service Providers Saying?
- Recommendations
39Recommendations
- Enterprises use Ethernet to improve service
quality, lower costs, and increase agility - move to multi-service access everywhere
- take a look at E-LAN services
- Service providers
- Dont miss the E-LAN (VPLS) boat!
- Build infrastructure, use NNIs to expand reach
- focus on SLAs, managed services, and
e-everything
Within 12 months carrier Ethernet will be the
preferred WAN technology for MNCs
40Ethernet Services Take Europe By Storm
41Thank you
- Phil Sayer
- 44 20 7323 7637
- psayer_at_forrester.co.uk
- www.forrester.com
42Ethernet in the 21st century organisation
- Tim Hubbard
- Head of Technology and Platform Introduction
- bt.com
43The changing environment
- Increased financial pressures on business
- Rising input costs e.g. energy and transport
costs - Economic slowdown putting pressure on
profitability - Organisations becoming ever more dependent
onnetworked IT services - Applications developments driving increase
innetwork demands - Moores law computing power doubles every 2
years - Edholms law data rates improve in a similar
manner to Moores law - Infrastructure must support the demands of
applicationsand business processes - Capacity
- Resilience
- Agility
- Imperative to reduce costs and improve efficiency
- But ensure short term measures support long-term
strategy
44Meeting the infrastructure challenge
Response
Scalable infrastructure supportingapplications
now and in future
New applications requirehigh network performance
Legacy infrastructure of limitedcapacity and
performance
High-capacity end-to-end networking
Managing disparate technologiesabsorbs resource
and raises costs
Simplified infrastructure Ethernet end-to-end
Local, National, Global - from a singleglobal
supplier
Wide geographical spread
Scarce skills to supportolder technologies
Managed service reduces pressures onin-house
staff
45BTs platform 21CN (21st century network)
21CN is an advanced multi-service network that
- Supports Ethernet and IP services
- Provides a platform for innovation,
collaboration, agilityand customer service - Enables the separation of network and services
- Enables a new generation of networked IT services
- Utilises 21CN Capabilities to support
fasterdevelopment of exciting new services - Empowers customers with control, choice and
flexibility - Radically enhances the customer experience
46What is Ethernet access?
- Access is the connection from the customers site
tothe network IP or Ethernet VPN (local,
national, global) - Ethernet access provides
- Standard well-known interface
- Flexibility in bandwidth use
- Uses expertise gained from LAN management
- Reduces costs by up to 50
- Access options
- Fibre
- Copper
- Passive Optic Networks
- Wireless
47What are Ethernet services?
- Layer 2 end-to-end Ethernet services
- There are three main variants
- Ethernet Private Line (EPL)
- Point to point service
- Evolution of TDM
- Ethernet Virtual Private Line (EVPL)
- Typically used for hub spoke networks
- Evolution of Frame Relay and ATM (CellStream)
- Ethernet LAN services (E-LAN)
- Any-to-any service
- Complementary to IP-VPN
48IP vs Ethernet the wrong debate
- A debate is raging
- Which is better IP or ethernet?
- Which is cheaper?
- Is ethernet going to take over from IP?
- Or will IP win out in the end?
- These are the wrong questions to ask
- Our view is that in the 21st Century network
- Ethernet and IP will co-exist
- Complimenting each other
- Meeting different needs
- Both occurring in hybrid networks
- Delivered over a single, global MPLSplatform
(21CN) - Sharing similar cost and service characteristics
49Differences between IP-VPN Ethernet services
- IP and Ethernet VPNs are complementary and suit
different requirements
IP-VPN
50The BT Ethernet portfolio
- Etherway
- Access component of Etherflow
- Can be multi-service accessto Layer 3 (e.g.
IPVPN) andLayer 2 (Ethernet VPN) services - EFM access
- Bonded copper access toa range of network
services,including IP and Ethernet VPNs
- Etherflow
- New 21CN service configurable as EPL, EVPL or (in
development) ELAN - MegaStream Ethernet
- Existing Ethernet EPL or EVPL service using
currentnetwork platforms - EtherConnect
- A custom regional network service designed
forlocal government - EES, FEES, GEES
- Point-to-point fibre Ethernet extension services
- 10Mbit/s Ethernet Extension Service (EES)
- 100Mbit/S Fast Ethernet Extension Services (FEES)
- 1Gbit/s Gigabit Ethernet Extension Services
(GEES) - BTnet
- BTs primary business internet access service via
Ethernet - IP Clear, IP Converge
- Proven and popular IP-VPN services now have
Ethernetaccess options
51Etherflow adaptive, high-performance,21st
century Ethernet
- BTs first 21CN business service in the UK
- An Ethernet private line Ethernet virtual private
line service - Provides a natural migration for private
circuits, ATM and Frame Relay and complementary
to IP-VPNs - Easy re-configuration to meet future needs
- You can choose from two traffic classes
- Standard
- Premium (for delay sensitive applications)
- Access speeds
- Oct 08 10Mbit/s 1Gbit/s
- Mar 09 1Mbit/s 1Gbit/s
- Virtual connection speeds
- 200Kbit/s 1Gbit/s
- Geographical rollout
- Oct 08 106 21CN Access nodes
- Mar 09 600 21CN Access nodes
- Dec 09 1000 21CN Access nodes
- Online customer service portal
52Ethernet in the First Mile (EFM) Access Options
- New bonded copper, symmetrical access
- Access speeds 2Mbit/s 10Mbit/s
- More flexible and cost-effective alternative to
accessingnetwork services compared to SDSL or
private circuits - Enhanced coverage via new 21CN Access Nodes
providinglower cost for fibre access - Can be used to access
- MegaStream Ethernet (an Ethernet VPN)
- IP Clear/Converge (an IP-VPN)
- EFM access to Etherflow available from Mar 09
- EFM rollout
- Aug 08 47 exchanges
- Mar 09 600 exchanges
53Our Ethernet credentials
- BT has been providing Ethernet accessservices
for over 17 years - A base of over 33,000 Ethernet installations
- BT experts are leading the development
ofEthernet standards - Guaranteed investment funding and timetablefor
UK rollout - With 21CN BT will bring you one of the
largestinstallations of Ethernet anywhere in the
world
54Some network scenarios
55Conclusions
56Panel IBusiness Services OverviewOfferings for
Today and Tomorrow
- Moderator James Eibisch
- Research Director, European Telecoms and
Networks, Forrester Research
57Business Services OverviewOfferings for Today
and Tomorrow
- James Moore, Global Product Marketing, BT
- Phil Tilley, VP EMEA Marketing, IP Division,
Alcatel Lucent - Ian Harris, Metro Ethernet Business Development,
Nortel
58Service Axes
- Three key attributes
- Service Type Based on MEF definitions (E-Line,
E-LAN, and Access) - Geography Area where service is delivered.
(Metro, national and international) - Speeds Bandwidth profile of delivered service
- Other attributes
- CoS/QoS service prioritization
- Protection schemes
- Handoffs
59IDC Forecast Framework
gt1000 Mbps
lt1000 Mbps
lt100 Mbps
lt10 Mbps
- Demand side firmographic information, enterprise
trends and research - Supply side carrier research, market analysis
60UK W. Europe Ethernet Forecast
Does not include Ethernet access (to Internet, IP
VPN, etc.) Spending growth from 1.5B in 2007 to
4.2B in 2012, CAGR of 22 Growth is highest in
national, international and high-bandwidth
services
61Applications
- General Demand
- LAN-to-LAN
- DR/BC
- Video conferencing (telepresence)
- Internet access
- Application aware networks/SOA
- Converged access
- VoIP
- Data center/IT infrastructure consolidation
- Virtualization, grid, utility services
- SaaS
- Business Process automation (ERP, CRM, SFA, etc.)
- Vertical Specific Demand
- Medical Imaging (PACS)
- CAD/CAM
- Video content (broadcast, streaming)
- Financial simulations (e.g. Monte Carlo)
- Financial trading and market info
- Distance learning
- Internet infrastructure
- Public sector
62Business Services OverviewOfferings for Today
and Tomorrow
- James Moore, Global Product Marketing, BT
- Phil Tilley, VP EMEA Marketing, IP Division,
Alcatel Lucent - Ian Harris, Metro Ethernet Business Development,
Nortel
63Case Study IBusiness Benefits of Carrier Ethernet
- Introduction Peter Konings
- Product Director, Global Private IP Services,
Verizon - Case Study Paul Ellis
- Chief Operating Officer, Fixnetix Ltd
64Global Communications Service Provider
Customers
From convergence, the new provider is enabled
Flexible Global Customer Engagement
Robust Customer Communications Portal
Globally Consistent Customer Care
Professional Services
Service Management Platform and Managed Services
Collaboration Solutions
Security Services
Application Performance
Global IP Network Services
Solid foundation capability with flexible service
solutions
65Verizon Business Networking Solutions
Communication Solutions
Innovative communicationsolutions
Security
Management
Collaboration
Global IP Network
Secure Gateway
Global networks with Secure Gateway integration
MPLS
Ethernet
Public IP
Extensive breadth and depth of access choices
Ethernet
Optical
Frame/ATM
Wireless
Remote Access
Satellite
DSL
66Reducing Latency while increasing Availability
67Increasing Availability Making Latency
Predictable
68Ethernet Growth and Market Projections Require a
Balanced Ethernet Product Portfolio
Ethernet Virtual Private Line (EVPL)
E-LANand Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS)
Ethernet Access
Ethernet Private Line (EPL)
69Business Benefits of Carrier Ethernet
- Case Study Paul Ellis
- Chief Operating Officer, Fixnetix Ltd
70- The ultimate trading advantage
- microsecond access
- end to end delivery
- easy integration
71THE OPPORTUNITY
Fixnetix is becoming the leading provider in
Europe for ultra low latency connectivity for
data trading
Outsourcing
Data
Trading
- New markets on demand
- Reduced latency
- reduced risk
- No missed opportunities
- Reduced cost of trading
- No long term commitment
- Restrict CapEx costs
- Expertise on demand
- No restrictions of
- resource or power
- Best Execution trading
- Never missing a tick
- Ability to future proof
- Performance Cost
Hedge Funds Agency Brokers Investment
Banks Exchanges/MTFs
71
71
72TRADING IS SLOW TODAY
Current solutions are manufactured using legacy
infrastructure Engineering a performant solution
requires a complete rebuild of existing
infrastructure using best of breed components and
the expertise to design and manage
Separate Execution Routing
Conventional Infrastructure
Market data
Multiple Networks
Aggregation
Ticker Plant
Data Distribution
72
72
73NEXT GENERATION TRADING INFRASTRUCTURE
Data is processed at the exchange source and
delivered as a Service on the wire
Fixnetix provide resilient high bandwidth
circuits using the same connection data trading
1-2 ms
iX-Direct
Market data
Exchange Technology
Connectivity People
- Co-Location
- Feed choice
- Vendor of Record
- NSP Status
- Network Design
- Engineering
- Support Monitoring
- Helpdesk
- Feed Handlers
- Ultra-low latency backbone
- Hardware
- Optimal routing
- Dedicated Network
- Gigabit circuits
73
73
74A PRICE MISSED IS AN OPPORTUNITY LOST
C
B
A
Best Execution Opportunity to sell a large block
without affecting the market Combination
B
C
A
B
74
74
7518 MONTHS OF ACHIEVEMENT
Exchange Memberships
- Stock Markets
- LSE
- Frankfurt
- Paris
- Amsterdam
- Brussels
- Lisbon
- Futures Options Markets
- Eurex
- Liffe
- MEFF (Spain)
- IDEM (Italy)
- Chicago Mercantile
- Bond Markets
- EuroMTS
- Multilateral Trading Facilities
- Equiduct
- Chi-X
- Turqouise
- BATS
- Dublin
- Milan
- Madrid
- Swiss
- Virt-x
Data Centres
75
76AN INTEGRATED TEAM/SOLUTION
- 3 - Network
- Co-location _at_Source
- Resilient live-live environment
- Multiple data centres
- Gb Ethernet/Fibre connections
- 1 - Exchange
- Co-location _at_Source
- Optimal connectivity choice
- Optimal Feed choice
- Official Data Vendor
- Exchange Network provider
- 4 - People
- Market leading integrated team covering all
deliverables - Engineering expertise
- 7am 9pm support
- Upgrades/Monitoring
- 2 - Technology
- Ultra low latency tickerplant
- Optimal Feed Handler choice
- Multiple interfaces for easy integration
Since seamless integration of all components and
resources remains a critical aspect
of maintaining a system with the lowest latency
possible, the firms that can create technology
teams by using knowledge that stretches from the
routing switch to the user interface will be the
ones who take the lead in low latency. Tabb
Group
76
77OUR CORE STRENGTHS
- World class team of Market Data professionals
- Not just a provider of one component but an
end-to-end solution encompassing all deliverables - Direct data vendor agreements with exchanges
- Network Service Provider status to provide
exchange trading connectivity - Distributed architecture close to each exchange
- Proven technology for sub-millisecond processing
- Network design with up to 1Gb Ethernet or fibre
connectivity
London (2)
Dual Gigabit
London (1)
Dual Gigabit
Frankfurt
Dual Gigabit
Paris
77
78CONCLUSION THE FIXNETIX ADVANTAGE
- Performance
- The fastest end to end solution
- Fully resilient with no single point of failure
- Multiple options including exchange colocation at
source and multiple telco connectivity solutions - Cost effectiveness
- Dramatically reduced total cost of ownership
- No CAPEX requirement
- Fully managed outsourced service
- Ease of integration
- Reduced lead times
- Multiple formats
- Services delivered on the wire with no hardware
or software installed on site - Expertise
- Dedicated team of experts from top IBs
- No customer investment required in technology
skills
78
79Network Topology
79
80Network Topology
80
81Panel IIEuropean and Global Services Availability
- Moderator James Eibisch
- Research Director, European Telecoms and
Networks, Forrester Research
82European and Global Services Availability
- Matthew Hayes, Consulting Systems Engineer, Ciena
- John Hoffman, Product Manager, Global Enterprise
Solutions, Tata Communications - Peter Konings, Product Director, Global Private
IP Services, Verizon
83Global Carrier Ethernet Services (B)
Excludes Ethernet access - as a result WE is
largest region now and in 2012 US and AP
dominated more by Ethernet access to other
services - IP or DIY networks. Ethernet widely
available in major regions now, and coverage
increasing rapidly worldwide
84Service Displacement
- Indications are displacement occurs but overall
bandwidth usage increases
85Growth Drivers
- Market Expansion
- Regional, country, municipal carrier deployments
- Large carriers filling out product suites
- Product Expansions
- VPLS, pseudowire services
- CoS/QoS Deployments
- Footprint Expansion
- Fiber buildouts
- Ethernet over copper
- Ethernet over wireless
86Limits to Growth
- Network Reach
- Fiber buildouts
- Over copper, wireless, etc.
- Over private line services
- Ethernet NNIs
- Offering proliferation/rationalization
- Customer understanding and confusion
87European and Global Services Availability
- Matthew Hayes, Consulting Systems Engineer, Ciena
- John Hoffman, Product Manager, Global Enterprise
Solutions, Tata Communications - Peter Konings, Product Director, Global Private
IP Services, Verizon
88Case Study IICarrier Ethernet The Business
Rationale
- Introduction Stuart Lodge, VP Enterprise, Tata
Communications - Presentation Case Studies Chas White,
President and Managing Principal, White and
Associates
89Who is Tata Communications?
- State-of-the-art Infrastructure
- 200,000 route km global network
- 300 points of presence (PoPs)
- 20 terabit submarine capacity
- 1M sq. feet of data center space
- Customers
- 1,500 global carriers
- 600 mobile operators
- Fortune 1000 of India
- 5,000 SMEs in India
- 500,000 Internet and broadband subs
- Industry Leader
- 1 global wholesale voice
- 1 global submarine cable capacity
- 1 international long distance services in India
- 1 enterprise data services in India
- 1 Internet services in India
90A New World of Communications
- Delivering an extensive product portfolio that
provides Converged IP Solutions and Managed
Services - Network Services
- Managed IT Infrastructure Services
- Collaboration Services
- Managed Application Services
- Managed Security Services
- Professional Services and Outsourcing
91Our Ethernet Portfolio and Global Coverage
- Point to Point
- Global Dedicated Ethernet
- National Dedicated Ethernet
- Priority Ethernet (National and Global)
- Point to Multipoint (Hub and Spoke)
- Priority Point to Multipoint Ethernet (National
and Global) - Dedicated Point to Multipoint Ethernet (National
and Global) - Multipoint (Any to Any)
- Dedicated Multipoint Ethernet (National and
Global) - Options
- Enterprise SLA Option
- (not available on Priority Ethernet or Priority
Point to Multipoint Ethernet today) - National services are within India
92Carrier Ethernet The Business Rationale
- Chas White, President and Managing Principal
- White and Associates
93Carrier Ethernet The Business Rationale
MEF Conference - London 18 September 2008
Chas M. White, MS President Managing
Principal White Associates RD, LLC
94Setting the Stage
- The Carrier Ethernet Services discussed are
intended to reflect the operational definitions
as depicted in the graphic to the right. - Rather than attempt to state an anticipated
value for any of the generally accepted financial
indicators (e.g., ROI, TCO, etc) the presentation
will identify key considerations necessary to
these calculations. - As with most emerging technologies, market
trends, variance between vendor offerings, the
TECH TRACKER CMP Publications 2006
- maturation state of relevant standards and
compliance therewith, and volatile pricing models
complicate future value calculations and will
influence attempts to generate independent
financial evaluations. - Decision criteria, such as security
considerations, that are less quantifiable but
often critical will be identified where relevant.
95Where does Ethernet fit in the Stack?
Source Forrester Research, Inc.
96Who is considering adoption?
- Within the US the three most aggressive sectors
in Ethernet adoption have been utilities (30),
finance and insurance (29), and media,
entertainment and leisure (36), the traditional
users of dedicated (PL) services.
97Ethernet in the European Market
- More developed (started in the UK and moved to
other countries) - Greater cross border providers single providers
with metro and national offerings in multiple
countries - Aggressive pricing and wide variety of services
- Has been less opportunistic about using Ethernet
on a global scale
Source Ovum Study (2007)
98National Global Ethernet Growth
- According to OVUM from a 2007 project Ovum
projects E-LAN to grow over the forecast period
the driver is economic
99What are the business drivers?
Service Providers are being pressured to migrate
to new service models in order to quickly
introduce new products and gain First Market
advantage, while leveraging existing capabilities
to achieve economies of scale.
Increasing Applications with CoS/ QoS
Requirements
End-to-End Services Management Common Service
Level Agreements
Business Continuity Disaster Recovery
requirements which demand high data rates and low
latency
While Service Providers often claim that cost
savings of 20 to 50 percent can be gained by
choosing Ethernet over comparable WAN services
the prices for long-haul connectivity have not
dropped as dramatically experience reflects
17-20 reductions over ATM/FR.
Price Flexibility Improved Scaling Intervals
Preference for Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 Solution
WAN Upgrade Requirements
100What are the primary cost drivers?
101Point to Multipoint Cost Comparison
102Point to Point Growth Cost savings
- Bandwidth Ethernet is able to provide more
granularity than Layer 1 - Ports Ethernet ports are more flexible and a
single port handles all the growth
103Multipoint Ethernet
- Key business drivers for moving to Multipoint
- Move the responsibility for a complex network to
the service provider, freeing up IT assets to
focus on revenue impacting items - Improve flexibility and bandwidth efficiency
while keeping security tight (using an Ethernet
over SONET/SDH platform) - Easy to make adjustments or add new sites without
impacting the active service on the network. - Key cost drivers
- Aggregate bandwidth with all sites, reducing per
meg costs - Much simpler architecture compared to multiple
point-to-points - Difference in High usage times between sites
due to time differences between global sites
creates a situation where total bandwidth
requirements can be decreased and bandwidth
efficiencies increase. (London not open when
Tokyo is open) - Adding new sites and adjusting the network for
optimal usage is very simple and not service
affecting.
104Current User Insights
105Key Take-Aways from Interviews
- Ubiquitous Ethernet knowledge
- Flexibility of port hardware Multi-vendor
interoperability - Potential for an Enterprise SLA
- Security offered by Ethernet over SONET
Switched vs Routed topology - Virtually no churn (lt2) reported across industry
high acceptance low migration risk
(providers, cables, circuit paths, etc) - Potential to reliably transport very high data
content files that are latency sensitive such as
those found in real time medical collaboration,
disaster recovery / business continuity
applications, distributed design team engineering
and architectural systems, and converged VoIP or
video applications optimized for operation in
multipoint-to-multipoint environments.
DISCERNABLE, IMPROVED FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE and
REDUCED RISK PROFILE
106Chas M. White, MS White Associates Research
Development, LLC 1(321) 255-2489 chas_at_chaswhite.
com
107Concluding RemarksDraw for Prizes
108Join us for Cocktails!
109PREMIER SPONSORS
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