This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2000/0619bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
Recycling failed
technologies?
By Scott
Bradner
Network World, 06/19/00
I
got a promotional e-mail from John McQuillan the other day. It was pushing his
Next Generation Networks (NGN) conference at the end of October in Washington
D.C., titled "Rethinking Routing." But the gist of the message seemed
to reflect more a fondness for technologies past than a rethinking.
According
to John, the reason it may be time to rethink Internet routing is the pending
explosion in the availability of optical networking technologies. Wave division
multiplexing, dense wave division multiplexing, optical multiplexers and
all-optical cross-connects are being or are about to be deployed over the
rapidly increasing web of optical fibers crisscrossing the country. These
fibers, as a Federal Communications Commission official noted, are being
deployed on a per fiber basis faster than the speed of sound.
This
new network will have the ability to be reconfigured in real time, and that
opens the door to new technologies that could reroute IP traffic in response to
congestion in the network. The multibillion dollar prices that have recently
been paid for companies in the optical network field - even companies without
any real products - show that John is not alone in his thinking of the
importance of this area.
I don't disagree with the above, but I do
wonder if John's leap from the ability to do agile networking on optical
networks to the usefulness of doing much of it is backed up by the needs of the
network of the future. I come down to the same issue that has kept me from
endorsing a number of "advances" in Internet technology in the past.
Most of these advances are trying to remake the datagram-based Internet into a
circuit-based clone of the phone network. But Internet traffic has little in
common with phone traffic; even Internet-based phone traffic may have little in
common with traditional phone traffic.
Circuit-based technologies
such as ATM, SONET and Multi-protocol Label Switching are used in large U.S.
ISPs these days to balance traffic between pairs of cities. Doing this type of
balancing on a real-time basis may become useful in the future, but I question
getting too much finer in granularity than city pairs, or maybe a few aggregate
quality-of-service classes between city pairs. Because there are few cities
where big ISPs have points of presence, this does not amount to that many
circuits - not nearly enough to justify the hype that is going around.
This
view is counter to John's and those of many other pundits who feel the ability
to be agile will spawn lots more circuits in the Internet. But it is consistent
with Internet history, which has weathered many other attacks on the utility of
datagram-based networking. Determining the real trends will take some time and
if I'm wrong, I'm sure someone will remember.
Disclaimer: I'll be
chairing a session or two and giving a tutorial at NGN, but as far as I know
Harvard will not be attending and the above observation is my own.
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