Re: Internet Video: The Next Wave of Massive Disruption to the US Peering Ecosystem (v1.2)
One other issue is that willingness to sell 10G is one vital competitive distinguisher in an otherwise largely commodity transit market. There have been rumors that older legacy carriers wish to punish more agile competitors for daring to "steal" 10G customers away from them, in spite of the fact that those older carriers have lots of trouble delivering 10G. There isn't anything new to that either. I can think of (similar to Sean's story) a time when a backbone had all NxDS3 links in their network and used to be very upset at the idea of selling OC3s instead of NxDS3 ("If its good enough for *our* backbone..."). Then this network went ATM on Fore systems boxes with handoffs to Cisco routers to leapfrog their competitors... which um, didn't work... Then they reluctantly went POS and "better" systems since... They are still around today after about 6 name changes. I have no present-day-knowledge of their network or, really, their performance, so I don't want to mention any names. Deepak
Re: Internet Video: The Next Wave of Massive Disruption to the US Peering Ecosystem (v1.2)
On Jan 10, 2007, at 12:33 PM, William B. Norton wrote: Why are folks turning away 10G orders? Some of this depends on how much you are willing to pay. The issue is as much 10G orders at today's transit prices as it is the capacity. We're used to paying less per unit for greater capacity, but when we're asking networks to sell capacity in chunks as large as the ones they use to build their backbones, that may simply not work. One other issue is that willingness to sell 10G is one vital competitive distinguisher in an otherwise largely commodity transit market. There have been rumors that older legacy carriers wish to punish more agile competitors for daring to "steal" 10G customers away from them, in spite of the fact that those older carriers have lots of trouble delivering 10G. - Dan
Re: Internet Video: The Next Wave of Massive Disruption to the US Peering Ecosystem (v1.2)
On Wed, Jan 10, 2007 at 09:33:41AM -0800, William B. Norton wrote: > > Why are folks turning away 10G orders? Quite simple... We've found a fair number of networks with no 10GE equipment and no budget to add it. Doubtless, some of these don't have OC192 capacity either. Others have 10G in the offing but are still putting it through "acceptance" testing and won't sell it for several more months. Others will happily sell you a 10GE circuit but then limit you to some fraction of that circuit because of internal limitations within their nodes. (I've seen this on more than one network.) And in any case, some of these don't have the egress capacity either from the local node to their backbone or to their peers/customers to be able to swallow that kind of traffic anyway. Truth be told, there really are not that many networks out there at present that are capable of accepting a 10G customer who actually intends to USE 10G. And believe it or not, there are still those out there that believe that customers aren't going to be able to pass a full 10G and therefore see no need to offer it at the edge. Currently, for all but the most intensive users, NxGE or NxOC48 still seems to be preferred termination. (Often this is also partly a factor of minimum commits and varying methods of billing.) This is changing but it's happening more slowly than I would like to see. My $0.37 (inflation's a pain) -Wayne --- Wayne Bouchard [EMAIL PROTECTED] Network Dude http://www.typo.org/~web/
Re: Internet Video: The Next Wave of Massive Disruption to the US Peering Ecosystem (v1.2)
On Wed, Jan 10, 2007 at 09:33:41AM -0800, William B. Norton wrote: > > Why are folks turning away 10G orders? > > I forgot to mention a couple other issues that folks brought up: > 4) the 100G equipment won't be standardized for a few years yet, so > folks will continue to trunk which presents its own challenges over > time. well, there's a few important issues here: currently the "state-of-the-art" is to bundle/balance n*10G. While it's possible to do 40G/n*40G in some places, this is not entirely universal. Given the above constraint, in delivering 10G/n*10G to "customers" requires some investment in your infrastructure to be able to carry that traffic on your network. The cost difference between sonet/sdh ports compared to 10GE is significant here and continues to be a driving force, imho. Typically in the past, the "tier-1" isps have had a larger circuit than the customer edge. eg: I have my OC3, but my provider network is OC12/OC48. Now with everyone having 10G since it is "cheap enough", this drives multihoming, routing table size, fib/tcam and other memory consumption, including the corresponding CPU "cost". > 5) the last mile infrastructure may not be able to/willing to accept > the competing video traffic . There was some disagreement among the > group I discussed this point with however. A few of the cable > operations guys said there is BW and the biz guys don't want to 'give > it away' when there is a potential to charge or block (or rather > mitigate the traffic as they do now). I suspect this in varies depending on how it's done. Most of the "cable" folks are dealing with short enough distances as long as the fiber quality is high enough, they could do 10/40G to the neighborhood. The issue becomes the coax side as well as the bandwidth consumption of those "analog" users. Folks don't upgrade their TV or set-top-box as quickly as they upgrade their computers. There's also a significant cost associated with any change and dealing with those grumpy users if they don't want a STB either. > My favorite data point was from Geoff Huston who said that the cable > companies are clinging to their 1998 business model as if it were > relevent in the world where peer-2-peer for distribution of large > objects has already won. He believes that the sophisticated > peer-2-peer is encrypting and running over ports noone will shut off, > the secure shell ports that are required for VPNs. > > So give up, be the best dumb pipes you can be I guess. I suspect there's going to be continued seperation "at the top" as folks see it. Those that can take on these new 10G and n*10G customers and deliver the traffic and those who run into peering and their own network issues in being able to deliver the bits. While 100G will ease some of this, there's still those pesky colo/power issues to deal with. unless you own your own facility, and even if you do, you may have months if not years of slowly evolving upgrades to face. Perhaps there will be some technology that will help us through this, but at the same time, perhaps not, and we'll be getting out the huge rolls of duct tape. It may not be politics that drives partial-transit/paid peering deals, it may just be plain technology. - Jared > On 1/10/07, Brandon Butterworth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > >> Then that wouldn't be enough since the other Tier 1's would need to > >> upgrade their peering infrastructure to handle the larger peering > >> links (n*10G), having to argue to their CFO that they need to do it so > >> that their competitors can support the massive BW customers. > > > >Someone will take the business so that traffic is coming > >regardless, they can either be that peer or be the source > >with the cash. If they can't do either then they're not > >in business, I hope they wouldn't ignore it congesting > >their existing peers (I know...) > > > >> Then even if the peers all upgraded the peering gear at the same time, > >> the backbones would have to be upgraded as well to get that traffic > >> out of the IXes and out to the eyeball networks. > > > >The Internet doesn't scale, turn it off > > > >brandon > > > > > > > -- > // > // William B. Norton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > // Co-Founder and Chief Technical Liaison, Equinix > // GSM Mobile: 650-315-8635 > // Skype, Y!IM: williambnorton -- Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from [EMAIL PROTECTED] clue++; | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/ My statements are only mine.
Re: Internet Video: The Next Wave of Massive Disruption to the US Peering Ecosystem (v1.2)
Why are folks turning away 10G orders? I forgot to mention a couple other issues that folks brought up: 4) the 100G equipment won't be standardized for a few years yet, so folks will continue to trunk which presents its own challenges over time. 5) the last mile infrastructure may not be able to/willing to accept the competing video traffic . There was some disagreement among the group I discussed this point with however. A few of the cable operations guys said there is BW and the biz guys don't want to 'give it away' when there is a potential to charge or block (or rather mitigate the traffic as they do now). My favorite data point was from Geoff Huston who said that the cable companies are clinging to their 1998 business model as if it were relevent in the world where peer-2-peer for distribution of large objects has already won. He believes that the sophisticated peer-2-peer is encrypting and running over ports noone will shut off, the secure shell ports that are required for VPNs. So give up, be the best dumb pipes you can be I guess. Bill On 1/10/07, Brandon Butterworth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Then that wouldn't be enough since the other Tier 1's would need to > upgrade their peering infrastructure to handle the larger peering > links (n*10G), having to argue to their CFO that they need to do it so > that their competitors can support the massive BW customers. Someone will take the business so that traffic is coming regardless, they can either be that peer or be the source with the cash. If they can't do either then they're not in business, I hope they wouldn't ignore it congesting their existing peers (I know...) > Then even if the peers all upgraded the peering gear at the same time, > the backbones would have to be upgraded as well to get that traffic > out of the IXes and out to the eyeball networks. The Internet doesn't scale, turn it off brandon -- // // William B. Norton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> // Co-Founder and Chief Technical Liaison, Equinix // GSM Mobile: 650-315-8635 // Skype, Y!IM: williambnorton
Re: Internet Video: The Next Wave of Massive Disruption to the US Peering Ecosystem (v1.2)
> Then that wouldn't be enough since the other Tier 1's would need to > upgrade their peering infrastructure to handle the larger peering > links (n*10G), having to argue to their CFO that they need to do it so > that their competitors can support the massive BW customers. Someone will take the business so that traffic is coming regardless, they can either be that peer or be the source with the cash. If they can't do either then they're not in business, I hope they wouldn't ignore it congesting their existing peers (I know...) > Then even if the peers all upgraded the peering gear at the same time, > the backbones would have to be upgraded as well to get that traffic > out of the IXes and out to the eyeball networks. The Internet doesn't scale, turn it off brandon
Re: Internet Video: The Next Wave of Massive Disruption to the US Peering Ecosystem (v1.2)
On 1/9/07, Adam Rothschild <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Here in the New York metro, you'd be hard pressed to find a vendor willing to turn away a 10G transit deal and the associated revenue. In the past few months, I've been approached by half a dozen or so major carriers eager to sell 10 gigabit ports, and with the capacity to deliver. If your customers are, indeed, reporting a widespread difficulty obtaining 10 gigabit ports from the larger players, I can think of plenty of smaller ISPs and switch-based resellers who'd be happy to carry their traffic. Sure they'd be happy too, but can they actually deliver it? It's one thing to sell a 4Gbps commit on a 10GbE port...but 30Gbps across four or five ports is another thing entirely...
Re: Internet Video: The Next Wave of Massive Disruption to the US Peering Ecosystem (v1.2)
On 1/9/07, Adam Rothschild <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: On 2007-01-09-12:08:16, "William B. Norton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > [...] a few of the largest US ISPs are turning away these n*10G > Internet video transit customers ! I'd be interested in learning of specific vendors/markets, along with the reasons given. Did they cite temporary capacity constraints, or anything of greater long-term significance? Yea, I found that interesting as well. There were "cascading issues" cited by one Tier 1 ISP. First, the network equipment currently deployed hasn't been paid for and they would have to go back and argue for more $$ for a forklift upgrade. Which leads to the second reason - the colos are out of space/power or both. Usually both. So a forklift upgrade may be needed to replace the current gear with the new monster CRS or better class equipment to handle the emerging n*10G Video traffic demand. Then that wouldn't be enough since the other Tier 1's would need to upgrade their peering infrastructure to handle the larger peering links (n*10G), having to argue to their CFO that they need to do it so that their competitors can support the massive BW customers. Then even if the peers all upgraded the peering gear at the same time, the backbones would have to be upgraded as well to get that traffic out of the IXes and out to the eyeball networks. Bill Here in the New York metro, you'd be hard pressed to find a vendor willing to turn away a 10G transit deal and the associated revenue. In the past few months, I've been approached by half a dozen or so major carriers eager to sell 10 gigabit ports, and with the capacity to deliver. If your customers are, indeed, reporting a widespread difficulty obtaining 10 gigabit ports from the larger players, I can think of plenty of smaller ISPs and switch-based resellers who'd be happy to carry their traffic. While I'm greatly interested in Internet video and the need to come up with new ways to deliver it more efficiently, I'd be weary of listing the [lack of] availability of transit ports as contributing factor. -a -- // // William B. Norton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> // Co-Founder and Chief Technical Liaison, Equinix // GSM Mobile: 650-315-8635 // Skype, Y!IM: williambnorton
Re: Internet Video: The Next Wave of Massive Disruption to the US Peering Ecosystem (v1.2)
On 2007-01-09-12:08:16, "William B. Norton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > [...] a few of the largest US ISPs are turning away these n*10G > Internet video transit customers ! I'd be interested in learning of specific vendors/markets, along with the reasons given. Did they cite temporary capacity constraints, or anything of greater long-term significance? Here in the New York metro, you'd be hard pressed to find a vendor willing to turn away a 10G transit deal and the associated revenue. In the past few months, I've been approached by half a dozen or so major carriers eager to sell 10 gigabit ports, and with the capacity to deliver. If your customers are, indeed, reporting a widespread difficulty obtaining 10 gigabit ports from the larger players, I can think of plenty of smaller ISPs and switch-based resellers who'd be happy to carry their traffic. While I'm greatly interested in Internet video and the need to come up with new ways to deliver it more efficiently, I'd be weary of listing the [lack of] availability of transit ports as contributing factor. -a
Re: Internet Video: The Next Wave of Massive Disruption to the US Peering Ecosystem (v1.2)
On Tue, Jan 09, 2007 at 09:08:16AM -0800, William B. Norton wrote: > > Hi all - > > Over the last year or so I have been working with Internet video > companies who asked essentially the same question - "What is the most > effective way of distributing massive quantities of Internet (video) > traffic?" This has become a significant issue NOW because a few of > the largest US ISPs are turning away these n*10G Internet video > transit customers ! Maybe the future is now:? http://www.merit.edu/mail.archives/nanog/2006-06/msg00357.html taking #16, #21 from the ISP predictions list, perhaps the above is part of that already rearing its head? I think #6 from the content provider list may have come true in part today ;) - jared -- Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from [EMAIL PROTECTED] clue++; | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/ My statements are only mine.
Internet Video: The Next Wave of Massive Disruption to the US Peering Ecosystem (v1.2)
Hi all - Over the last year or so I have been working with Internet video companies who asked essentially the same question - "What is the most effective way of distributing massive quantities of Internet (video) traffic?" This has become a significant issue NOW because a few of the largest US ISPs are turning away these n*10G Internet video transit customers ! Thanks to all of you that shared your insights, or let me walk you through what this community has found to date, and especially those of you who shared their data points and allowed me to cite you as a source. I'm at the point now where I'd like to share the current draft (v1.2) of this discussion paper with a broader audience, epsecially those who will allow me to schedule a time to talk through the draft with you. (I have found this is the most effective way to get feedback next to face-to-face walkthroughs over lunch). Here's the Abstract: Video Internet: The Next Wave of Massive Disruption to the U.S. Peering Ecosystem (v1.2) In previous research we documented three significant disruptions to the U.S. Peering Ecosystem as the Cable Companies, Large Scale Network Savvy Content Companies, and Tier 2 ISPs started peering openly. By peering with directly each other they effectively bypassed the Tier 1 ISPs resulting in improved performance, greater control over the end-user experience, and overall lower operating costs. This paper predicts a new wave of disruption that potentially dwarfs currently peered Internet traffic. Some of this emerging wave of Video Traffic is demonstrating viral properties, so the more popular videos are generating massive "Flash Crowd" effects. Viral Amplifiers (sites that do not host but rather highlight the most popular videos) amplify any viral properties a video may have. If we combine this flash crowd effect and the increased size of the video files downloaded, we see the crest of the first wave of significant incremental load on the Internet. The majority of this paper details four models for Internet Video Distribution (Transit, Content Delivery Networks, Transit/Peering/DIY CDN, Peer2Peer) across three load models. The cost models include network and server equipment along with pricing models for various distribution methods. Dozens of walkthroughs of this paper have led to stepwise refinement of the models and insights into why one would prefer or not prefer one model over the other. The summary is a comparison in cost-per-video across small, medium, and large distributions. The models (spreadsheets) can be made available to those interested. Bill -- // // William B. Norton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> // Co-Founder and Chief Technical Liaison, Equinix // GSM Mobile: 650-315-8635 // Skype, Y!IM: williambnorton