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Driving your Grid destiny

Driving your Grid destiny. Benoit Fleury VP, Product Management and Marketing. April 9 th , 2003. Agenda. Ceyba: The company The Grid Environment Bandwidth Trends New Optical Directions Driving your Grid Destiny. Unique long-haul solution. Optical equipment vendor. World class team.

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Driving your Grid destiny

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  1. Driving your Grid destiny Benoit Fleury VP, Product Management and Marketing April 9th, 2003

  2. Agenda • Ceyba: The company • The Grid Environment • Bandwidth Trends • New Optical Directions • Driving your Grid Destiny Proprietary and Confidential

  3. Unique long-haul solution Optical equipment vendor World class team Ceyba: The company Proprietary and Confidential

  4. Agenda • Ceyba: The company • The Grid Environment • Bandwidth Trends • New Optical Directions • Driving your Grid Destiny Proprietary and Confidential

  5. Bridging the gaps • Terascale scientific applications • astronomy, physics, genomic, meteorology …. • Applications need geographically separated resources • compute, data/storage and instrumentation intensive • With inadequate bandwidth, scientists either need their own massive resources, or must travel to other resource sites • Grid must couple and integrate geographically separated computing, storage and instrumentation resources • Optical bandwidth is an enabling technology for the Grid Optics overcome the ‘tyranny of distance’ Proprietary and Confidential

  6. Key Grid communication requirements High capacity ‘back-plane’ • Terabit capacity, easily added incremental capacity, low latency Operational simplicity • ‘Self-running’ infrastructure: auto-discovery of network resources, auto power balancing, integrated diagnostics • End-user ability to reconfigure network capacity and connectivity • Scheduled and partitioned network capacity for user separation and security User control • Transport native Ethernet traffic and any other data protocols in a transparent manner Data centric Proprietary and Confidential

  7. Agenda • Ceyba: The company • The Grid Environment • Bandwidth Trends • New Optical Directions • Driving your Grid Destiny Proprietary and Confidential

  8. Staying ahead of bandwidthdemand Interface rates and transport system capacity Gb/s 10000 1000 Transport system capacity * 100 10 1 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 0.1 0.01 LAN interface rates ** TDM interface rates ** 0.001 Optical capacity… no limits * Ref: adapted from: Nortel NFOEC 2002 paper B.5.2 & presentation chart, RHK NFOEC 2002 presentation chart for paper F.8.1, Bell Labs-Lucent IEEE Com. Mag. Paper Dec. 2002, p.75 ** Ref: adapted from: Nortel NFOEC 2002 paper B.5.2 & presentation chart Proprietary and Confidential

  9. Optical amplifiers give huge boost to core capacity 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Keeping up with the Moore’s Resource amount 1.E+10 Transport system bandwidth (kb/s) * 65% av. growth per year Doubles every 17 mths 1.E+09 1.E+08 Storage density (bits/cm^2) ** 39% av. growth per year Doubles every 25 mths 1.E+07 1.E+06 Processor density (transistors/chip) ** 39% av. growth per year Doubles every 25 mths 1.E+05 1.E+04 1.E+03 1.E+02 Bandwidth keeps pace with Grid technologies * Ref: Ref: adapted from: Nortel NFOEC 2002 paper B.5.2 & presentation chart, RHK NFOEC 2002 presentation chart for paper F.8.1, Bell Labs-Lucent IEEE Com. Mag. Paper Dec. 2002, p.75 ** Ref: IBM & Intel, in IEEE Spectrum, Aug. 2002, pp.38 Proprietary and Confidential

  10. Agenda • Ceyba: The company • The Grid Environment • Bandwidth Trends • New Optical Directions • Driving your Grid Destiny Proprietary and Confidential

  11. New-gen network differences • End to end connections (ULH) • Edge transponders only • Optical mesh Optical amplifiers New optical directions • Existing core optical networks • Discrete, point to point WDM links • Regenerator intensive • SONET rings Frequent regenerators Proprietary and Confidential

  12. Transponders 13% Optics 19% Regens up to 68% Optics 50% Transponders 50% Regens 0% 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000 Connection length (km) Lowering connection cost Connection cost per Gbps*km versus distance Cost breakdown Regen every 500 km Relative Cost per Gbps*km No regens Motivation to eliminate regenerators Proprietary and Confidential

  13. = client transponder = regenerator = amplifier Rapid bandwidth additions Existing point-to-point networking Regenerator intensive regenerator sites • New Gen networking • Streamlined core – less inventory & maintenance Simpler operations, faster provisioning Proprietary and Confidential

  14. “Virtual fiber” networks Los Angeles Denver Boston Chicago • Scheduled and partitioned network capacity • User separation and security San Diego Dallas Direct, dedicated connections via optical bypass Proprietary and Confidential

  15. End-user network control Electronics (transponders) now mainly at user sites Easy to add new capacity, rapid wavelength turn-up, network reconfiguration Inherent ‘hard’/secure partition of network to different sites and users A band of wavelengths per site, a wavelength per user User owned and operated circuits Greater user choice: Carrier or 3rd party owned and operated common infrastructure Empowering users, promoting innovation Proprietary and Confidential

  16. Data centric P • Rate transparency • 1G, 2.5G, 10G, 40G, 100G, etc. P • Protocol/Service transparency • Ethernet, FICON, ESCON, SONET/SDH, etc. • 1GE, 10GE LAN PHY native support P • Control-plane transparency • clear channels for user control plane signaling across the network Future proofing the network Proprietary and Confidential

  17. Agenda • Ceyba: The company • The Grid Environment • Bandwidth Trends • New Optical Directions • Driving your Grid Destiny Proprietary and Confidential

  18. Implementation options Proprietary and Confidential

  19. Back to the future Proprietary and Confidential

  20. Optical technology keeping pace New optics ideally suited for Grids New implementation options The bottom line Proprietary and Confidential

  21. www.ceyba.com

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