Cisco is introducing a new router that will be able to handle the dramatic increase in demand for Internet downloads |
The new core router technology, known as "CRS-X," will provide speeds
of 400 Gigabits per second -- and that's just for one slot on the router's
rack. Each rack is scalable up to 6.4 Terabits per second, and the entire CRS-X
system is capable of nearly 1 Petabit per second if multiple racks are set up
in tandem.
That is insanely fast -- double anything that currently
exists on the market.
A single CRS-X rack will be able to provide streaming HD
video to every New Yorker simultaneously, Cisco claims. A full, multichassis
setup is capable of downloading the entire printed collection of the Library of
Congress in a split second and can stream every movie ever created in about a
minute.
Core routers sit
at the epicenter of the Internet, serving as the traffic cops at the biggest
intersections on the busiest data highways. They connect visitors' requests to
sites likeGoogle (GOOG, Fortune 500), Netflix (NFLX) and Facebook (FB) and they send data back to the right
place in return.
They're a crucial part of the Internet backbone, and one
that Cisco has a comfortable lead in. Cisco has 750 CRS customers, selling
10,000 systems to date, and it commands a roughly 65% share of the core routing
market. That's more than double No. 2 Juniper's(JNPR) share.
Cisco says its solution is cheaper than Juniper's
offerings. For instance, customers who installed Cisco's previous core router, dubbed CRS-3, in 2010, can upgrade to CRS-X by
simply swapping out their CRS-3 cards for the new ones. In previous updates,
Juniper has required customers to buy entire new router setups to upgrade their
systems.
"It's as easy as putting in new line cards,"
said Stephen Liu, Cisco's director of service provider marketing. "For all
intents and purposes, it'll then be a CRS-X -- except for what the paint on the
outside says."
Cisco says the CRS-X will help customers prepare for the "Internet of Everything," a much-discussed (but yet-to-arrive) world in
which household items, cars and even clothing will connect to the Internet.
Instead of connecting 4 million devices simultaneously, carriers and ISPs may
soon need to connect 40 million items at the same time.
That's why modern core routers like the CRS-X manage
different kinds of traffic in separate ways. You'll have a miserable experience
if your Netflix video stream keeps getting interrupted, but you likely wouldn't
notice if it takes a split second longer to load a website.
"The innovation our customers are getting isn't just
about faster speeds and more lanes on the highway," said Liu. "It's
more like a GPS system that helps you find the best path based on traffic
congestion."
Though the CRS-X won't go on sale until the fall or even
begin shipping until the end of 2013, customers are already saying they're
impressed. Mike Haberman, vice president of network operations at Verizon (VZ, Fortune 500) Wireless said the new CRS system will
help the nation's largest wireless provider meet its service demands "well
into the future.
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