Skip to main content

Cisco unveils new router to drive video

Cisco made a significant announcement today in its effort to revamp the Internet as we know, launching a new networking router that has the power and the capacity to handle the demands of the next generation Internet.

The product is the Cisco CRS-3 Carrier Routing System, which is designed to be the “foundation” of the next-generation Internet, one that can set the pace for video growth. The device promises to more than 12 times the traffic capacity of the closest competing system, with up to 322 terabits per second. How fast is that? The company said it enables the entire printed collection of the Library of Congress to be downloaded in just over one second.

OK, that’s fast - but why do we need this sort of speed and capacity?

This is less about the Internet that connects Web surfers; This is about the Internet’s backbone - a beefed-up pipeline that exceeds the sort of power that we actually need today, but prepares us for the growth that will come from Internet as it relates to video and advanced communications.

The company also said that AT&T recently tested the CRS-3 in a successful completion of a field trial of 100-Gigabit backbone network technology. The CRS-3 is currently in other field trials.

In a Webcast announcement, CEO John Chambers talked about how changing needs drive this demand. This is about meeting the needs of a future generation of users, today’s kids who already see video and communications as part of our connected lives,

This is also about verticals such as health care or education or government and their needs to not only connect to each other for enhanced communications but with their customers, as well. On a business front, this is about the technology that will change everything from virtualization to collaboration.

John Chambers says this is a step in Cisco moving away from being just the plumber of the Internet to being a business partner, and adviser on how to bring new life to new technologies. Chambers has long said that the network is at the core of the Internet.

What was funny was that Chambers acknowledged this announcement wont turn many heads among consumer-level Internet users. It’s boring backbone stuff for consumers - but it sets the stage for the Internet experience for the future.

As for Cisco’s attempt at drawing attention to this news, the company seemed to take a page from Apple’s playbook - and I don’t know that it was that effective. Cisco issued a press release yesterday, inviting the tech press to an online event for an announcement that would “change the Internet forever.”

This was a bit stiff, though - executives sitting around a table with another exec on the big screen, via Cisco’s telepresence technology. In some ways, this is the press conference of the future - a “casual” setting where executives sit around and talk about how evolutionary its new offering is while we all tune in.

Just by the announcement itself, this hype was a bit more than what was delivered. Sure, the news is important to the changing role of the Internet - but it’s no iPad announcement. And once we picked up the meat of the news, there really wasn’t much more there - it wasn’t like Chambers plopped down in a bug comfy leather chair to demo the technology the way Steve Jobs might do.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Google leaps language barrier with translator phone

GOOGLE is developing software for the first phone capable of translating foreign languages almost instantly — like the Babel Fish in The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. By building on existing technologies in voice recognition and automatic translation, Google hopes to have a basic system ready within a couple of years. If it works, it could eventually transform communication among speakers of the world’s 6,000-plus languages. The company has already created an automatic system for translating text on computers, which is being honed by scanning millions of multi-lingual websites and documents. So far it covers 52 languages, adding Haitian Creole last week. Google also has a voice recognition system that enables phone users to conduct web searches by speaking commands into their phones rather than typing them in. Now it is working on combining the two technologies to produce software capable of understanding a caller’s voice and translating it into a synthetic equivalent in a foreign

Everything about Java 8

The following post is a comprehensive summary of the developer-facing changes coming in Java 8. This next iteration of the JDK is currently scheduled for general availability in  September 2013 . Read More

Three reasons Microsoft wants to kill the Windows Desktop

Microsoft's Windows Blue update to Windows 8  makes it increasingly clear that Microsoft wants to kill the Desktop.  That may seem self-defeating, but there's method in Microsoft's madness. Here are three reasons I think it wants to eventually kill the Desktop. Help Windows Phone and Windows tablets gain market share Unify the operating system Lock enterprises into future versions of Windows Read More