Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-24 Thread Collin Rose
Sorry for the late response, but I can speak about the FS M6200 product. We 
have been using the 10GOEO card for 10G DWDM/WDM on a span. The hardware works 
reasonably well though we had to reseat a card once in the last 18 months or so 
of operation. It also seems to be a bit finicky when you first install a new 
card. Their support had us slot/reslot and move around a few times before 
things started working as expected. My biggest complaint is that the ONLY way 
to manage the box is through the EMS system, which must be installed on a 
windows OS. It has an embedded apache server that provides the interface, so it 
doesn’t have to run on windows server. The EMS uses SNMP for all the 
configuration of the hardware itself. We figured out how to do some basic 
things like change the IP using snmp, but besides, that there is no way to 
manage it without connectivity back to the EMS, no CLI, no internal web 
interface, etc.

Collin R



From: NANOG  on behalf of Mike 
Hammett 
Date: Friday, October 6, 2023 at 5:43 PM
To: David Bass 
Cc: nanog@nanog.org 
Subject: Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms
Well, and that's kinda where I was going.

I've used FS passive systems for years. FS has an active platform or two (that 
I understand, they just whitebox). Does it really do everyone one would need to 
do? How much of a step is it to get something more?


-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions<http://www.ics-il.com/>
[Image removed by sender.]<https://www.facebook.com/ICSIL>[Image removed by 
sender.]<https://plus.google.com/+IntelligentComputingSolutionsDeKalb>[Image 
removed by 
sender.]<https://www.linkedin.com/company/intelligent-computing-solutions>[Image
 removed by sender.]<https://twitter.com/ICSIL>
Midwest Internet Exchange<http://www.midwest-ix.com/>
[Image removed by sender.]<https://www.facebook.com/mdwestix>[Image removed by 
sender.]<https://www.linkedin.com/company/midwest-internet-exchange>[Image 
removed by sender.]<https://twitter.com/mdwestix>
The Brothers WISP<http://www.thebrotherswisp.com/>
[Image removed by sender.]<https://www.facebook.com/thebrotherswisp>[Image 
removed by sender.]<https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXSdfxQv7SpoRQYNyLwntZg>

From: "David Bass" 
To: "Dave Bell" 
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Sent: Friday, October 6, 2023 8:55:21 AM
Subject: Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms
On the same topic, anyone have experience with the stuff from 
fs.com<http://fs.com>?

On Fri, Oct 6, 2023 at 9:53 AM Dave Bell 
mailto:m...@geordish.org>> wrote:
Smartoptics?

https://smartoptics.com/

Regards,
Dave

On Fri, 6 Oct 2023 at 14:43, Mark Tinka  wrote:


On 10/6/23 15:07, Mike Hammett wrote:

> I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple 
> different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of 
> platform.
>
> In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long distances 
> of glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60 miles.
>
> In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.
>
> What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a 30 
> terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to learn 
> more about what features I need and what features I don't need from somewhere 
> other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at the least 
> cost as well.

400G-ZR pluggables will get you 400Gbps on a p2p dark fibre over 80km -
100km. So your main cost there will be routers that will support.

The smallest DCI solution from the leading DWDM vendors is likely to be
your cheapest option. Alternatively, if you are willing to look at the
open market, you can find gear based on older CMOS (40nm, for example),
which will now be EoL for any large scale optical network, but cost next
to nothing for a start-up with considerable capacity value.

There is a DWDM vendor that showed up on the scene back in 2008 or
thereabouts. They were selling a very cheap, 1U box that had a different
approach to DWDM from other vendors at the time. I, for the life of me,
cannot remember their name - but I do know that Randy introduced them to
me back then. Maybe he can remember :-). Not sure if they are still in
business.

Mark.




Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-20 Thread Mark Tinka




On 10/19/23 22:24, Chad Lamb via NANOG wrote:

XKL is still here ...
Some caveats on 400G ZR/ZR+ devices:
- They are power hungry, cooling is a challenge.  800G even more so.  
The OSFP package for 800G looks like the better choice than QSFP-DD 
for this reason.  We'll see, we need more mileage on this.
- For the ZR devices, not all vendors are equal.  Some support 4x100GE 
as well as 400GE, if that matters to you.  Some have integrated BERT 
and encryption, some do not.
- Do not plan on inter-operating different vendors of ZR+ devices.  
They will interoperate only in ZR mode.
- Plenty of filter options out there if you are putting the ZR/ZR+ in 
your router.  I'll throw a plug in for the Coherent free space DWDM 
filter. Free space technology has the best IL and isolation numbers.  
Coherent hasn't packaged it in a module for easy racking yet (XKL can 
provide that).  So if you aren't adding an EDFA, the lowest IL you can 
get helps your reach.
- If you have at least a few 400G channels, add an EDFA and use the Tx 
= -10dBm devices, rather than the Tx = 0dBm devices.  This is cost 
effective.  The EDFA also extends the reach considerably. You can 
launch each channel up to +10dBm or more, for a modest number of 
channels, without getting in trouble with fiber non-linearities 
(four-wave mixing).


Many thanks, Chad.

Glad to hear XKL are still in business, and doing well :-).

Mark.


Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-20 Thread Chad Lamb via NANOG

XKL is still here ...
Some caveats on 400G ZR/ZR+ devices:
- They are power hungry, cooling is a challenge.  800G even more so.  
The OSFP package for 800G looks like the better choice than QSFP-DD for 
this reason.  We'll see, we need more mileage on this.
- For the ZR devices, not all vendors are equal.  Some support 4x100GE 
as well as 400GE, if that matters to you.  Some have integrated BERT and 
encryption, some do not.
- Do not plan on inter-operating different vendors of ZR+ devices. They 
will interoperate only in ZR mode.
- Plenty of filter options out there if you are putting the ZR/ZR+ in 
your router.  I'll throw a plug in for the Coherent free space DWDM 
filter. Free space technology has the best IL and isolation numbers.  
Coherent hasn't packaged it in a module for easy racking yet (XKL can 
provide that).  So if you aren't adding an EDFA, the lowest IL you can 
get helps your reach.
- If you have at least a few 400G channels, add an EDFA and use the Tx = 
-10dBm devices, rather than the Tx = 0dBm devices.  This is cost 
effective.  The EDFA also extends the reach considerably.  You can 
launch each channel up to +10dBm or more, for a modest number of 
channels, without getting in trouble with fiber non-linearities 
(four-wave mixing).


Chad


On 10/7/23 10:35 PM, Mark Tinka wrote:

Finally, the name came to me :-):

https://www.xkl.com/

Looks like they are still in business.

Mark.

On 10/6/23 16:02, Mark Tinka wrote:



On 10/6/23 15:52, Dave Bell wrote:

Smartoptics?

https://smartoptics.com/


Not them.

I want to say they had an "X" in their name, but memory is fuzzy.

Mark.




Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-09 Thread Thomas Croghan
I did some work with their passive DWDM equipment. Everything was within spec 
and seemed to work fine for the year I was there after we deployed it.

Actually being honest, we did all our light loss math based on FS's specs and 
we ended up having to use attenuators in one instance. So be certain to check 
the certification sheets when you get your product.

On Oct 9, 2023 09:13, michael brooks - ESC  wrote:
>On the same topic, anyone have experience with the stuff from 
>fs.com?

We use their patch cables, both SM and MM. Solid product, and good to work with 
(we have had them build custom-length cables).



michael brooks
Sr. Network Engineer
Adams 12 Five Star Schools
michael.bro...@adams12.org

"flying is learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss"



On Fri, Oct 6, 2023 at 8:04 AM David Bass 
mailto:davidbass...@gmail.com>> wrote:
On the same topic, anyone have experience with the stuff from 
fs.com?




This is a staff email account managed by Adams 12 Five Star Schools.  This 
email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended solely 
for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. If you have 
received this email in error please notify the sender.



Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-09 Thread michael brooks - ESC
>On the same topic, anyone have experience with the stuff from fs.com

?

We use their patch cables, both SM and MM. Solid product, and good to work
with (we have had them build custom-length cables).



michael brooks
Sr. Network Engineer
Adams 12 Five Star Schools
michael.bro...@adams12.org

"flying is learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss"



On Fri, Oct 6, 2023 at 8:04 AM David Bass  wrote:

> On the same topic, anyone have experience with the stuff from fs.com
> 
> ?
>
>
>>>
>>>

-- 
This is a staff email account managed by Adams 12 Five Star Schools.  This 
email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended 
solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. 
If you have received this email in error please notify the sender.


Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-08 Thread David Bass
Yeah, was looking at their active solution for a customer, but just don’t
know enough about it to go that route.

David

On Fri, Oct 6, 2023 at 10:17 AM Mike Hammett  wrote:

> Well, and that's kinda where I was going.
>
> I've used FS passive systems for years. FS has an active platform or two
> (that I understand, they just whitebox). Does it really do everyone one
> would need to do? How much of a step is it to get something more?
>
>
>
> -
> Mike Hammett
> Intelligent Computing Solutions <http://www.ics-il.com/>
> <https://www.facebook.com/ICSIL>
> <https://plus.google.com/+IntelligentComputingSolutionsDeKalb>
> <https://www.linkedin.com/company/intelligent-computing-solutions>
> <https://twitter.com/ICSIL>
> Midwest Internet Exchange <http://www.midwest-ix.com/>
> <https://www.facebook.com/mdwestix>
> <https://www.linkedin.com/company/midwest-internet-exchange>
> <https://twitter.com/mdwestix>
> The Brothers WISP <http://www.thebrotherswisp.com/>
> <https://www.facebook.com/thebrotherswisp>
> <https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXSdfxQv7SpoRQYNyLwntZg>
> ------
> *From: *"David Bass" 
> *To: *"Dave Bell" 
> *Cc: *nanog@nanog.org
> *Sent: *Friday, October 6, 2023 8:55:21 AM
>
> *Subject: *Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms
>
> On the same topic, anyone have experience with the stuff from fs.com?
>
> On Fri, Oct 6, 2023 at 9:53 AM Dave Bell  wrote:
>
>> Smartoptics?
>>
>> https://smartoptics.com/
>>
>> Regards,
>> Dave
>>
>> On Fri, 6 Oct 2023 at 14:43, Mark Tinka  wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On 10/6/23 15:07, Mike Hammett wrote:
>>>
>>> > I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a
>>> couple different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next
>>> level of platform.
>>> >
>>> > In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long
>>> distances of glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60
>>> miles.
>>> >
>>> > In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.
>>> >
>>> > What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a
>>> 30 terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to
>>> learn more about what features I need and what features I don't need from
>>> somewhere other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at
>>> the least cost as well.
>>>
>>> 400G-ZR pluggables will get you 400Gbps on a p2p dark fibre over 80km -
>>> 100km. So your main cost there will be routers that will support.
>>>
>>> The smallest DCI solution from the leading DWDM vendors is likely to be
>>> your cheapest option. Alternatively, if you are willing to look at the
>>> open market, you can find gear based on older CMOS (40nm, for example),
>>> which will now be EoL for any large scale optical network, but cost next
>>> to nothing for a start-up with considerable capacity value.
>>>
>>> There is a DWDM vendor that showed up on the scene back in 2008 or
>>> thereabouts. They were selling a very cheap, 1U box that had a different
>>> approach to DWDM from other vendors at the time. I, for the life of me,
>>> cannot remember their name - but I do know that Randy introduced them to
>>> me back then. Maybe he can remember :-). Not sure if they are still in
>>> business.
>>>
>>> Mark.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>


Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-07 Thread Mark Tinka

Finally, the name came to me :-):

https://www.xkl.com/

Looks like they are still in business.

Mark.

On 10/6/23 16:02, Mark Tinka wrote:



On 10/6/23 15:52, Dave Bell wrote:

Smartoptics?

https://smartoptics.com/


Not them.

I want to say they had an "X" in their name, but memory is fuzzy.

Mark.


Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-07 Thread Hank Nussbacher

On 06/10/2023 16:07, Mike Hammett wrote:

I  have found that for low end DWDM solutions, 
https://www.packetlight.com/ has always been the cheapest available.


Regards,
Hank


I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple 
different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of 
platform.

In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long distances of 
glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60 miles.

In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.

What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a 30 
terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to learn 
more about what features I need and what features I don't need from somewhere 
other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at the least 
cost as well.

Thanks.



-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com

Midwest-IX
http://www.midwest-ix.com





RE: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-06 Thread Tim Burke
I'll throw another in the hat for SmartOptics... great products and support. We 
have a good deal of their stuff for local regional deployments and it's super 
reliable, even at over 100km on a mediocre dark fiber span.

From: NANOG  On Behalf Of Joe Freeman
Sent: Friday, October 6, 2023 9:01 AM
To: Dave Bell ; Mark Tinka 
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

I have several of the Smart Optics DCP-M40's in place. If you are using 
coherent 100G DWDM optics, you can push the M40-ZR's to 100-120km. The exact 
reach depends, of course, on the quality of the fiber plant in use.


From: NANOG 
mailto:nanog-bounces+joe=netbyjoe@nanog.org>>
 on behalf of Dave Bell mailto:m...@geordish.org>>
Date: Friday, October 6, 2023 at 9:54 AM
To: Mark Tinka mailto:mark@tinka.africa>>
Cc: nanog@nanog.org<mailto:nanog@nanog.org> 
mailto:nanog@nanog.org>>
Subject: Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms
Smartoptics?

https://smartoptics.com/

Regards,
Dave

On Fri, 6 Oct 2023 at 14:43, Mark Tinka 
mailto:mark@tinka.africa>> wrote:


On 10/6/23 15:07, Mike Hammett wrote:

> I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple 
> different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of 
> platform.
>
> In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long distances 
> of glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60 miles.
>
> In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.
>
> What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a 30 
> terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to learn 
> more about what features I need and what features I don't need from somewhere 
> other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at the least 
> cost as well.

400G-ZR pluggables will get you 400Gbps on a p2p dark fibre over 80km -
100km. So your main cost there will be routers that will support.

The smallest DCI solution from the leading DWDM vendors is likely to be
your cheapest option. Alternatively, if you are willing to look at the
open market, you can find gear based on older CMOS (40nm, for example),
which will now be EoL for any large scale optical network, but cost next
to nothing for a start-up with considerable capacity value.

There is a DWDM vendor that showed up on the scene back in 2008 or
thereabouts. They were selling a very cheap, 1U box that had a different
approach to DWDM from other vendors at the time. I, for the life of me,
cannot remember their name - but I do know that Randy introduced them to
me back then. Maybe he can remember :-). Not sure if they are still in
business.

Mark.


Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-06 Thread Mike Hammett
Well, and that's kinda where I was going. 

I've used FS passive systems for years. FS has an active platform or two (that 
I understand, they just whitebox). Does it really do everyone one would need to 
do? How much of a step is it to get something more? 




- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 

Midwest Internet Exchange 

The Brothers WISP 

- Original Message -

From: "David Bass"  
To: "Dave Bell"  
Cc: nanog@nanog.org 
Sent: Friday, October 6, 2023 8:55:21 AM 
Subject: Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms 


On the same topic, anyone have experience with the stuff from fs.com ? 



On Fri, Oct 6, 2023 at 9:53 AM Dave Bell < m...@geordish.org > wrote: 



Smartoptics? 


https://smartoptics.com/ 



Regards, 
Dave 


On Fri, 6 Oct 2023 at 14:43, Mark Tinka  wrote: 




On 10/6/23 15:07, Mike Hammett wrote: 

> I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple 
> different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of 
> platform. 
> 
> In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long distances 
> of glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60 miles. 
> 
> In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves. 
> 
> What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a 30 
> terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to learn 
> more about what features I need and what features I don't need from somewhere 
> other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at the least 
> cost as well. 

400G-ZR pluggables will get you 400Gbps on a p2p dark fibre over 80km - 
100km. So your main cost there will be routers that will support. 

The smallest DCI solution from the leading DWDM vendors is likely to be 
your cheapest option. Alternatively, if you are willing to look at the 
open market, you can find gear based on older CMOS (40nm, for example), 
which will now be EoL for any large scale optical network, but cost next 
to nothing for a start-up with considerable capacity value. 

There is a DWDM vendor that showed up on the scene back in 2008 or 
thereabouts. They were selling a very cheap, 1U box that had a different 
approach to DWDM from other vendors at the time. I, for the life of me, 
cannot remember their name - but I do know that Randy introduced them to 
me back then. Maybe he can remember :-). Not sure if they are still in 
business. 

Mark. 









Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-06 Thread Mark Tinka




On 10/6/23 15:53, Dave Cohen wrote:

My experience is primarily with the traditional carrier-grade folks 
like Ciena, Infinera, etc. but over the last decade all of those 
vendors have focused on improving how they scale down without 
sacrificing (most of the) quality and functionality - to varying 
degrees of success. There are also some more recent entrants that 
built their products to target the DCI market but rather than focusing 
on bandwidth density have focused on cost per bit for a mid-range 
solution. There are almost definitely multiple quality options out 
there without having to buy the full 88 channel n-degree ROADM Ciena 
6500 that takes up a full rack - although given the stated 
requirements, there may not be a one-size-fits-all solution that's 
ideal for all of the OP's projects.


There are two markets driving the major vendors right now - DCI and subsea.

The regular longhaul terrestrial gear is mostly the same, bar for 
upgrades to the latest CMOS. For these vendors, the same gear is also 
re-used for their subsea solutions, although with "submarine" versions 
of their terrestrial line cards.


Adva's TeraFlex is a bit different in that it is optimized both for DCI 
and longhaul terrestrial. We are currently looking at it for a 700km 
deployment in one of our markets. Very impressive!


Another entrant into the market is Acacia, now known as the Cisco 
NCS1000. They also use the same platform for both terrestrial and subsea:


https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/products/optical-networking/network-convergence-system-1000-series/index.html

Mark.


Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-06 Thread Mark Tinka




On 10/6/23 15:52, Dave Bell wrote:

Smartoptics?

https://smartoptics.com/


Not them.

I want to say they had an "X" in their name, but memory is fuzzy.

Mark.


Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-06 Thread Joe Freeman
I have several of the Smart Optics DCP-M40’s in place. If you are using 
coherent 100G DWDM optics, you can push the M40-ZR’s to 100-120km. The exact 
reach depends, of course, on the quality of the fiber plant in use.


From: NANOG  on behalf of Dave Bell 

Date: Friday, October 6, 2023 at 9:54 AM
To: Mark Tinka 
Cc: nanog@nanog.org 
Subject: Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms
Smartoptics?

https://smartoptics.com/

Regards,
Dave

On Fri, 6 Oct 2023 at 14:43, Mark Tinka  wrote:


On 10/6/23 15:07, Mike Hammett wrote:

> I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple 
> different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of 
> platform.
>
> In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long distances 
> of glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60 miles.
>
> In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.
>
> What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a 30 
> terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to learn 
> more about what features I need and what features I don't need from somewhere 
> other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at the least 
> cost as well.

400G-ZR pluggables will get you 400Gbps on a p2p dark fibre over 80km -
100km. So your main cost there will be routers that will support.

The smallest DCI solution from the leading DWDM vendors is likely to be
your cheapest option. Alternatively, if you are willing to look at the
open market, you can find gear based on older CMOS (40nm, for example),
which will now be EoL for any large scale optical network, but cost next
to nothing for a start-up with considerable capacity value.

There is a DWDM vendor that showed up on the scene back in 2008 or
thereabouts. They were selling a very cheap, 1U box that had a different
approach to DWDM from other vendors at the time. I, for the life of me,
cannot remember their name - but I do know that Randy introduced them to
me back then. Maybe he can remember :-). Not sure if they are still in
business.

Mark.



Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-06 Thread Ryan Hamel
Solid Optics? -- 
https://www.solid-optics.com/product/edfamux-multiplexer-amplifier-dispersion-compensation-dwdm-mux-edfa/

Ryan


From: NANOG  on behalf of Dave Bell 

Sent: Friday, October 6, 2023 6:52 AM
To: Mark Tinka 
Cc: nanog@nanog.org 
Subject: Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

Caution: This is an external email and may be malicious. Please take care when 
clicking links or opening attachments.

Smartoptics?

https://smartoptics.com/

Regards,
Dave

On Fri, 6 Oct 2023 at 14:43, Mark Tinka  wrote:


On 10/6/23 15:07, Mike Hammett wrote:

> I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple 
> different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of 
> platform.
>
> In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long distances 
> of glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60 miles.
>
> In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.
>
> What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a 30 
> terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to learn 
> more about what features I need and what features I don't need from somewhere 
> other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at the least 
> cost as well.

400G-ZR pluggables will get you 400Gbps on a p2p dark fibre over 80km -
100km. So your main cost there will be routers that will support.

The smallest DCI solution from the leading DWDM vendors is likely to be
your cheapest option. Alternatively, if you are willing to look at the
open market, you can find gear based on older CMOS (40nm, for example),
which will now be EoL for any large scale optical network, but cost next
to nothing for a start-up with considerable capacity value.

There is a DWDM vendor that showed up on the scene back in 2008 or
thereabouts. They were selling a very cheap, 1U box that had a different
approach to DWDM from other vendors at the time. I, for the life of me,
cannot remember their name - but I do know that Randy introduced them to
me back then. Maybe he can remember :-). Not sure if they are still in
business.

Mark.




Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-06 Thread David Bass
On the same topic, anyone have experience with the stuff from fs.com?

On Fri, Oct 6, 2023 at 9:53 AM Dave Bell  wrote:

> Smartoptics?
>
> https://smartoptics.com/
>
> Regards,
> Dave
>
> On Fri, 6 Oct 2023 at 14:43, Mark Tinka  wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On 10/6/23 15:07, Mike Hammett wrote:
>>
>> > I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple
>> different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of
>> platform.
>> >
>> > In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long
>> distances of glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60
>> miles.
>> >
>> > In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.
>> >
>> > What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a
>> 30 terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to
>> learn more about what features I need and what features I don't need from
>> somewhere other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at
>> the least cost as well.
>>
>> 400G-ZR pluggables will get you 400Gbps on a p2p dark fibre over 80km -
>> 100km. So your main cost there will be routers that will support.
>>
>> The smallest DCI solution from the leading DWDM vendors is likely to be
>> your cheapest option. Alternatively, if you are willing to look at the
>> open market, you can find gear based on older CMOS (40nm, for example),
>> which will now be EoL for any large scale optical network, but cost next
>> to nothing for a start-up with considerable capacity value.
>>
>> There is a DWDM vendor that showed up on the scene back in 2008 or
>> thereabouts. They were selling a very cheap, 1U box that had a different
>> approach to DWDM from other vendors at the time. I, for the life of me,
>> cannot remember their name - but I do know that Randy introduced them to
>> me back then. Maybe he can remember :-). Not sure if they are still in
>> business.
>>
>> Mark.
>>
>>
>>


Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-06 Thread Mel Beckman

One of my clients is Calient Technologies:

https://www.calient.net/

Their S320 optical switch is entirely photonic — no electrical transceivers in 
any optical path at all — using 3D MEMS technology. It’s great for reliable 
multi-lambda provisioning, and sports built-in power monitoring and passive 
network diagnostics. It doesn’t do DMDM itself, but it is a great way to 
automate DWDM traffic engineering with real-time optical path provisioning.  
It’s essentially a zero-latency 400 Mbps matrix switch.

 -mel

On Oct 6, 2023, at 6:44 AM, Mark Tinka  wrote:



On 10/6/23 15:07, Mike Hammett wrote:

I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple 
different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of 
platform.

In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long distances of 
glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60 miles.

In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.

What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a 30 
terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to learn 
more about what features I need and what features I don't need from somewhere 
other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at the least 
cost as well.

400G-ZR pluggables will get you 400Gbps on a p2p dark fibre over 80km - 100km. 
So your main cost there will be routers that will support.

The smallest DCI solution from the leading DWDM vendors is likely to be your 
cheapest option. Alternatively, if you are willing to look at the open market, 
you can find gear based on older CMOS (40nm, for example), which will now be 
EoL for any large scale optical network, but cost next to nothing for a 
start-up with considerable capacity value.

There is a DWDM vendor that showed up on the scene back in 2008 or thereabouts. 
They were selling a very cheap, 1U box that had a different approach to DWDM 
from other vendors at the time. I, for the life of me, cannot remember their 
name - but I do know that Randy introduced them to me back then. Maybe he can 
remember :-). Not sure if they are still in business.

Mark.


https://www.calient.net/

Their S320 optical switch is entirely photonic — no electrical transceivers 
in any optical path at all — using 3D MEMS technology. It’s great for 
reliable multi-lambda provisioning, and sports built-in power monitoring and 
passive network diagnostics. It doesn’t do DMDM itself, but it is a great way 
to automate DWDM traffic engineering with real-time optical path provisioning.  
It’s essentially a zero-latency 400 Mbps matrix switch.

 -mel

> On Oct 6, 2023, at 6:44 AM, Mark Tinka  wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>> On 10/6/23 15:07, Mike Hammett wrote:
>> 
>> I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple 
>> different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of 
>> platform.
>> 
>> In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long distances 
>> of glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60 miles.
>> 
>> In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.
>> 
>> What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a 30 
>> terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to learn 
>> more about what features I need and what features I don't need from 
>> somewhere other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at 
>> the least cost as well.
> 
> 400G-ZR pluggables will get you 400Gbps on a p2p dark fibre over 80km - 
> 100km. So your main cost there will be routers that will support.
> 
> The smallest DCI solution from the leading DWDM vendors is likely to be your 
> cheapest option. Alternatively, if you are willing to look at the open 
> market, you can find gear based on older CMOS (40nm, for example), which will 
> now be EoL for any large scale optical network, but cost next to nothing for 
> a start-up with considerable capacity value.
> 
> There is a DWDM vendor that showed up on the scene back in 2008 or 
> thereabouts. They were selling a very cheap, 1U box that had a different 
> approach to DWDM from other vendors at the time. I, for the life of me, 
> cannot remember their name - but I do know that Randy introduced them to me 
> back then. Maybe he can remember :-). Not sure if they are still in business.
> 
> Mark.
> 
> 


Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-06 Thread Dave Cohen
My experience is primarily with the traditional carrier-grade folks like
Ciena, Infinera, etc. but over the last decade all of those vendors have
focused on improving how they scale down without sacrificing (most of the)
quality and functionality - to varying degrees of success. There are also
some more recent entrants that built their products to target the DCI
market but rather than focusing on bandwidth density have focused on cost
per bit for a mid-range solution. There are almost definitely multiple
quality options out there without having to buy the full 88 channel
n-degree ROADM Ciena 6500 that takes up a full rack - although given the
stated requirements, there may not be a one-size-fits-all solution that's
ideal for all of the OP's projects.

On Fri, Oct 6, 2023 at 9:43 AM Mark Tinka  wrote:

>
>
> On 10/6/23 15:07, Mike Hammett wrote:
>
> > I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple
> different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of
> platform.
> >
> > In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long
> distances of glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60
> miles.
> >
> > In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.
> >
> > What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a 30
> terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to
> learn more about what features I need and what features I don't need from
> somewhere other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at
> the least cost as well.
>
> 400G-ZR pluggables will get you 400Gbps on a p2p dark fibre over 80km -
> 100km. So your main cost there will be routers that will support.
>
> The smallest DCI solution from the leading DWDM vendors is likely to be
> your cheapest option. Alternatively, if you are willing to look at the
> open market, you can find gear based on older CMOS (40nm, for example),
> which will now be EoL for any large scale optical network, but cost next
> to nothing for a start-up with considerable capacity value.
>
> There is a DWDM vendor that showed up on the scene back in 2008 or
> thereabouts. They were selling a very cheap, 1U box that had a different
> approach to DWDM from other vendors at the time. I, for the life of me,
> cannot remember their name - but I do know that Randy introduced them to
> me back then. Maybe he can remember :-). Not sure if they are still in
> business.
>
> Mark.
>
>
>

-- 
- Dave Cohen
craetd...@gmail.com
@dCoSays
www.venicesunlight.com


Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-06 Thread Dave Bell
Smartoptics?

https://smartoptics.com/

Regards,
Dave

On Fri, 6 Oct 2023 at 14:43, Mark Tinka  wrote:

>
>
> On 10/6/23 15:07, Mike Hammett wrote:
>
> > I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple
> different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of
> platform.
> >
> > In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long
> distances of glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60
> miles.
> >
> > In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.
> >
> > What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a 30
> terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to
> learn more about what features I need and what features I don't need from
> somewhere other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at
> the least cost as well.
>
> 400G-ZR pluggables will get you 400Gbps on a p2p dark fibre over 80km -
> 100km. So your main cost there will be routers that will support.
>
> The smallest DCI solution from the leading DWDM vendors is likely to be
> your cheapest option. Alternatively, if you are willing to look at the
> open market, you can find gear based on older CMOS (40nm, for example),
> which will now be EoL for any large scale optical network, but cost next
> to nothing for a start-up with considerable capacity value.
>
> There is a DWDM vendor that showed up on the scene back in 2008 or
> thereabouts. They were selling a very cheap, 1U box that had a different
> approach to DWDM from other vendors at the time. I, for the life of me,
> cannot remember their name - but I do know that Randy introduced them to
> me back then. Maybe he can remember :-). Not sure if they are still in
> business.
>
> Mark.
>
>
>


Re: Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-06 Thread Mark Tinka




On 10/6/23 15:07, Mike Hammett wrote:


I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple 
different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of 
platform.

In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long distances of 
glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60 miles.

In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.

What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a 30 
terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to learn 
more about what features I need and what features I don't need from somewhere 
other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at the least 
cost as well.


400G-ZR pluggables will get you 400Gbps on a p2p dark fibre over 80km - 
100km. So your main cost there will be routers that will support.


The smallest DCI solution from the leading DWDM vendors is likely to be 
your cheapest option. Alternatively, if you are willing to look at the 
open market, you can find gear based on older CMOS (40nm, for example), 
which will now be EoL for any large scale optical network, but cost next 
to nothing for a start-up with considerable capacity value.


There is a DWDM vendor that showed up on the scene back in 2008 or 
thereabouts. They were selling a very cheap, 1U box that had a different 
approach to DWDM from other vendors at the time. I, for the life of me, 
cannot remember their name - but I do know that Randy introduced them to 
me back then. Maybe he can remember :-). Not sure if they are still in 
business.


Mark.




Low to Mid Range DWDM Platforms

2023-10-06 Thread Mike Hammett
I've been using various forms of passive WDM for years. I have a couple 
different projects on my plate that require me to look at the next level of 
platform.

In some projects, I'll be looking for needing to have someone long distances of 
glass without any electronics. Some spans could be over 60 miles.

In some projects, I'll need to transport multiple 100-gig waves.

What is the landscape like between basic passive and something like a 30 
terabit Ciena? I know of multiple vendors in that space, but I like to learn 
more about what features I need and what features I don't need from somewhere 
other than the vendor's mouth. Obviously, the most reliability at the least 
cost as well.

Thanks.



-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com

Midwest-IX
http://www.midwest-ix.com