Cisco Introduces a 322 Tbit/sec. Router 281
CWmike writes "Today Cisco Systems introduced its next-generation Internet core router, the CRS-3, with about three times the capacity of its current platform. 'The Internet will scale faster than any of us anticipate,' Cisco's John Chambers said while announcing the product. At full scale, the CRS-3 has a capacity of 322Tbit/sec., roughly three times that of the CRS-1, introduced in 2004. It also has more than 12 times the capacity of its nearest competitor, Chambers said. The CRS-3 will help the Internet evolve from a messaging to an entertainment and media platform, with video emerging as the 'killer app,' Chambers said. Using a CRS-3, every person in China, which has a population just over 1.3 billion, could participate in a video phone call at the same time. (Or you could pump nearly one Library of Congress per second through the device, or give everyone in San Fransisco a 1Gbps internet connection.) AT&T said it has been using the CRS-3 to test 100Gbit/sec. data links in tests on a commercial fiber route in Florida and Louisiana."
Re:Will it run DDWRT or Tomato? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sure BrainSlayer will at least ask you to register for the pay version of DD-WRT. :)
jaded, who care? (Score:5, Insightful)
Between terrible last mile infrastructure and ISP throttling I can't help but sarcastically comment big freaking deal.
Re:The question on everyone's mind (Score:5, Insightful)
Strangely, at $90,000 a pop, this strikes me as rather cheap. I wonder if that's a "rate limited" model so that you have to pay big bux more in order to get the full capacity?
You wish. For $90K you probably get an empty chassis... the smallest available empty chassis, that is.
Geek Porn (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The question on everyone's mind (Score:5, Insightful)
When do we consumers benefit? (Score:5, Insightful)
So, I've been waiting for something better than 150 kB/s service for years, despite the promises by AT&T and Verizon that they're "rolling out" fiber to the home. Not my home.
When can I finally stream in real time at least one channel of video content that's not so compressed that it's unwatchable? At a subscription rate of under $40/month? When that happens, I'll be impressed.
However, I'm fearing that USians have been living under monopoly conditions of artificial bandwidth scarcity for so long that we're going to let the AT&Ts and Verizons charge us an arm and a leg for this kind of service in the near term.
My initial response to this was... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:jaded, who care? (Score:4, Insightful)
Between terrible last mile infrastructure and ISP throttling I can't help but sarcastically comment big freaking deal.
We'll they can't complain now that there isn't enough bandwidth so they have to meter it now.
Cisco as I see it has a vested interested in ensuring that the net remains neutral to push these kind of product upgrades. Coupled with premise end-point equipment it stands that they would want more bandwidth use and leverage monitoring, rather then metering, Internet use.
Metering is a waste, monitoring and then selling said info, there is where the money will be...
Re:Too small a jump for a 6 years -- red flags! (Score:5, Insightful)
Moore's law is about transistor density, not computing power.
Re:"Library of Congresses"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Library of Congress is a moving target. What would pass today, won't in 2020.
That said, I'm going with Video Calls per Chinese Person too. It's just much funnier. :)
Re:Too small a jump for a 6 years -- red flags! (Score:2, Insightful)
Moore's law (which doesn't work in every way, but it certainly works for the computing processors in this thing) would suggest that this thing has a lot more CPU power than the CRS-1. (In six years we'd expect somewhere between 8 and 32 times the oomph.) And yet they only encumbered it with three times the bandwidth.
Moore's law [wikipedia.org] applies to the number of transistors on an integrated circuit and has absolutely nothing to do with bandwidth. Chip throughput is much more a function of the chip architecture than the number of transistors on chip. Even if chip throughput was somehow correlated to Moore's law, there are still unrelated inefficiencies in the physical layer that are very complex and difficult to overcome.
Bandwidth cap (Score:5, Insightful)
Using a CRS-3, every person in China, which has a population just over 1.3 billion, could participate in a video phone call at the same time. (Or you could pump nearly one Library of Congress per second through the device, or give everyone in San Fransisco a 1Gbps internet connection.)
Or, could exceed their monthly bandwidth "cap" in 155 microseconds. So, what good is it?
Re:The question on everyone's mind (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Internet and Internet 2 is smoke in the US of A (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, just like us swedes, man we were sure ravaged in WW2...</sarcasm>
Re:You're Kidding me, right? (Score:3, Insightful)
Speak for yourself, Mr. FullOfYourself!
I think seeing a big impressive machine is always cool. It’s the same reason I like hearing about the newest supercomputer.
Re:You're Kidding me, right? (Score:1, Insightful)
Yeah, and I'm probably not going to space any time soon but news from NASA is clearly news for nerds.
It doesn't have to be immediately relevant or impact me directly to be worthy of being on slashdot. It just has to be interesting, as defined by nerdy interests. This qualifies for many of us.
Re:Internet and Internet 2 is smoke in the US of A (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, that's $347 million out of a total of $12,731 million.
I also took the liberty to look up the GDP of Sweden in the late 1940s and early 1950s as well as the exchange SEK to USD exchange rate back in those days. Since you mentioned 1950 we'll go with that year. In 1950 Sweden received $260,000,000 through the Marshall plan. That same year the Swedish GDP was SEK 39,426,346,000 which was worth about $7,611,000,000 at the time. The swedish GDP for the years prior to and after 1950 was similar (although it was steadily growing) and somehow I doubt that the $48,000,000 Sweden received in 1949 was all that important (the GDP was roughly SEK 31,000,000,000 that year).
But hey, if it makes you feel good to think that a little "please don't become commies" bribe you gave us in the 1940s is what made it possible for us to have a decent telecommunications infrastructure then go right ahead.
/Mikael