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Strong Backbone Required To Work in Cyberspace.


The exploding growth in the dot-corn world - with thousands of entrepreneurs developing new products and services online - gives the impression of a disorderly, disconnected universe.

Two Web-centric businesses that rely on an IP network backbone illustrate this new universe. Center 7 is an application service provider (ASP) providing Internet start-ups with the ability to outsource their network and infrastructure needs, and Digital Broadband Group is a company that provides free digital subscriber lines (DSL DSL
 in full Digital Subscriber Line

Broadband digital communications connection that operates over standard copper telephone wires. It requires a DSL modem, which splits transmissions into two frequency bands: the lower frequencies for voice (ordinary
) to its customers. DSL is a service that allows a consumer or business to get high speed access from a local provider that is connected to the Internet at all times.

Not true. Web-centric businesses, those companies whose business relies in some part on the Internet, are being created and flourish because they are supported by strong communications backbones and specialized services (such as location of mission critical equipment in sites that give them easy access to a high capacity, high speed transmission network or "backbone") customized for specific business needs. This "backbone" like that in the human anatomy Human anatomy is primarily the scientific study of the morphology of the adult human body.[1] It is subdivided into gross anatomy and microscopic anatomy.[1]  provides support,. shape and houses the core that carries messages from end-to-end. However, the cyberspace backbone is not of bone or even copper wire, but of glass fiber and is driven by the Internet Protocol See Internet and TCP/IP.

(networking) Internet Protocol - (IP) The network layer for the TCP/IP protocol suite widely used on Ethernet networks, defined in STD 5, RFC 791. IP is a connectionless, best-effort packet switching protocol.
 (IP) technology.

Web-centric Business

The web-centric environment operates with high-speed connectivity, close profit margins, and must deliver dependability and reliability to its customers. It uses burgeoning amounts of bandwidth from a supporting backbone network A backbone network provides a path for the exchange of information between different LANs or subnetworks.[1] A backbone can tie together diverse networks in the same building, in different buildings in a campus environment, or over wide areas. , along with related communications services - without which it's unable to deliver on promises to customers. This community is highly competitive, and known for its speed and volatility. It also demands superior performance from its business partners. Thus, the backbone provider must meet, as well as prepare to meet, existing and unanticipated Web-centric business demands.

The Communications Backbone

The backbone is the IP network that is based upon packet switching A network technology that breaks up a message into small packets for transmission. Unlike circuit switching, which requires the establishment of a dedicated point-to-point connection, each packet in a packet-switched network contains a destination address.  and a virtual endless supply of bandwidth or transmission capacity. The IP backbone is the enabler of Web-centric communications -- upgrading technology, expanding capacity and increasing speed to meet the voracious appetites of these new business entities. The projected demand illustrates the economic drivers of the technology-driven web-centric environment.

By the end of 1999, over 259 million users worldwide caused Internet traffic Internet traffic is the flow of data around the Internet. It includes web traffic, which is the amount of that data that is related to the World Wide Web, along with the traffic from other major uses of the Internet, such as electronic mail and peer-to-peer networks.  to double every 100 days. Online shoppers spent more than $15 billion last year, double the amount in 1998. Business-to-business electronic commerce (e-commerce), by a number of accounts, exceeded $100 billion in 1999-with some forecasters expecting this market to mushroom to $7 trillion by 2004.

Wire versus Fiber

The traditional telecommunications companies began their businesses with copper wire and circuit switching A networking technology that provides a temporary, but dedicated, connection between two stations no matter how many switching devices the data are routed through. Circuit switching was originally developed for the analog-based telephone system in order to guarantee steady, consistent  technology over 100-years ago. This technology no longer meets the dynamic needs for speed and capacity of Web-centric businesses. Fiber is, the cable of the Web-centric world and it is constantly being reinvented to keep ahead of this new business sector.

Fiber optic cables, which once contained as few as six fibers, now can easily contain 1,200 fibers or more - each about the size of human hair. And Dense Wave-Division Multiplexing (DWDM (Dense WDM) The term given to wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) when significantly more channels were being added. Since WDM is increasingly more "dense" all the time, both terms are used synonymously. See WDM.

DWDM - wavelength division multiplexing
) enables multiple lasers and transceivers to share a single optical fiber by using different wavelengths of colors of light simultaneously. More than 40 wavelengths can be transmitted in a single fiber today and the typical channel bandwidth has risen from 2.5 Gigabits per second (2.5 billion bits of information) per second to 10 Gigabits per second.

The next generation of multiple conduit fiber networks will stretch from Hong Kong Hong Kong (hŏng kŏng), Mandarin Xianggang, special administrative region of China, formerly a British crown colony (2005 est. pop. 6,899,000), land area 422 sq mi (1,092 sq km), adjacent to Guangdong prov.  to Frankfurt, providing new businesses with over 34,000 times the capacity of the one cable available only three years ago.

Bandwidth Glut or Endless Demand

Preparing to do business with web-centric customers requires an adjustment in business growth models. As the NASDAQ NASDAQ
 in full National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations

U.S. market for over-the-counter securities. Established in 1971 by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), NASDAQ is an automated quotation system that reports on
 market makes clear on a daily basis, new companies are rushing to serve what they perceive as a niche market A niche market also known as a target market is a focused, targetable portion (subset) of a market sector.

By definition, then, a business that focuses on a niche market is addressing a need for a product or service that is not being addressed by mainstream providers.
 opportunity, made possible by the Internet How do you keep a backbone strong in the face of unknown demand?

The first global network built entirely on P technology is being constructed by Level 3 Communications
Not to be confused with L-3 Communications, a communications system company.


Level 3 Communications NASDAQ: LVLT is a communications and information services company headquartered in Broomfield, Colorado, USA.
 and is an example of the new business model. Instead of laying one cable and pouring concrete over it, as was done by legacy telecommunications companies, Level 3 is laying 10-12 11/4-inch conduits along its network. Instead of building traditional data centers with wiring located above suspended ceilings and behind cabinets and walls, Level 3 is building Gateways (which are portals to its network) with wires and cables easily accessible to upgrade the newest fiber, technology, or to meet increases in bandwidth demand.

Silicon economics predicts that with growth in usage, prices for bandwidth will decline, and that over time the cost of moving information a bit per mile per second over an P network will drop as much as 50 percent per year, every year. What is sometimes forgotten is that bandwidth demand is not static at any price - and the price will inevitably go down as technology improves.

Web-centric Versus Brick and Mortar Businesses

It isn't the businesses that are new, it is the way business is being conducted that differentiates a Web-centric firm from a brick and mortar See bricks and mortar.  establishment.

Amazon.com sells books and tapes; Lucent Technologies provides components, software as well as business systems to businesses; and RCN RCN n abbr (= Royal Canadian Navy) → kanadische Marine  provides bundled telecommunications services to the residential market.

The entertainment industry has spawned another category of Web-centric business applications such as Vertical Productions Link, which provides on-line back office systems for movie production companies. Other web-centric entertainment companies include STV STV Single Transferable Vote
STV Star Trek: Voyager
STV Samanyolu TV (Turkey)
STV Satellite Television
STV Scottish Television
STV Stranglethorn Vale (World of Warcraft computer game) 
, which provides streaming television programs developed for delivery over the Internet, and Sony Online, which runs multiple user games' online over an IP-based backbone.

In addition to connectivity to an IP backbone, Web-centric businesses often need to colocate mission critical equipment in a reliable, secure environment, complete with software and professional personnel support services support services Psychology Non-health care-related ancillary services–eg, transportation, financial aid, support groups, homemaker services, respite services, and other services  provided 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Colocation is one of the fastest growing businesses for backbone networks.

The ability to insure rapid growth from a few hundred hits a day to being able to pass a hundred million transactions a day, is made possible by access to an IP communications A general term for networks that use the IP protocol for voice (VoIP) and video traffic. See IP telephony.  backbone. Web-centric companies, revolutionizing the way businesses reach their customers, are bypassing the traditional telecommunications environment. Thanks to innovative companies, IP technology is being utilized to build a backbone that can grow and expand along with the marketplace.

Timothy L Rahtz is Sales Director for Level 3 Communications' Los Angeles Gateway.
COPYRIGHT 2000 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:RAHTZ, TIMOTHY L.
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Date:May 15, 2000
Words:1076
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