Tuesday, September 1, 2009

UK Network Delivers 100 GIGABITS per Second

UK Network Delivers 100 GIGABITS per Second.
JANET is the first National Research and Education Network in the world successfully to complete a 100Gbit/s network trial.The trial was conducted over a 103 km section of fibre between JANET core network points of presence (PoPs) in London and Reading during April 2009. The fibre infrastructure and facilities were provided by Verizon Business, the supplier and operator of JANET’s UK backbone network, with Nortel providing the 100Gbit/s optical technology and test equipment.


JANET(UK) recently completed a major upgrade of its national UK backbone network to 40Gbit/s. Jeremy Sharp, Head of Strategic Technologies at JANET(UK), commented that "Whilst introducing 40Gbit/s technology was an important move that will support traffic growth over the next few years, it's envisaged that 100Gbit/s circuits may be required within the next two to three years in the busiest parts of the network. This trial is an important preparatory step towards doing this, and we are pleased to have worked with our industry partners to achieve this."

The Nortel 40G/100G Adaptive Optical Engine technology used in the JANET trial is unique in that it automatically corrects for signal degradations due to fibre impairments that particularly manifest themselves at higher speeds of 40Gbit/s and 100Gbit/s. It is also designed to operate with compatible performance to today’s 10Gbit/s networks while increasing capacity ten-fold. The solution requires no expensive network re-engineering and it can use existing assets including in-ground fibre. "With the Nortel-supplied 40Gbit/s already in operation on major long distance routes, demonstrating the network’s upgrade potential to 100Gbit/s and the ease with which it can be done shows how JANET can achieve a ten-fold increase in its network capacity without needing to lease and light new fibres," said Jamie Jefferies (Leader Metro Ethernet Networks, EMEA), Nortel. Verizon Business has worked closely with JANET(UK) for more than eight years supporting its objective of establishing an innovative means of sharing of ideas, data and learning across the UK-based academic community.

Last year the company helped to deliver the ambitious 40Gbit/s upgrade programme, assuring that the JANET service remains a world-class infrastructure for UK education and research. "Verizon Business is pleased to support JANET(UK) in undertaking this field trial of 100Gbit/s technology," said Michael Bauer, director of European network planning for Verizon Business. "For customers such as JANET, collaboration is critical, and so we are delighted to be able to bring our expertise to bear in support of the company’s network goals.”

The trial consisted of a combination of existing 10Gbit/s and 40Gbit/s test traffic with wavelengths set on either side of the 100Gbit/s traffic within a 50Ghz grid. External polarisation dispersion (pd has the effect of limiting fibre bandwidth) was added and exercised, and demonstrated the extra performance that the coherent optical receiver in the Adaptive Optical Engine enables. Greater than 25ps dispersion was added, which resulted in error-free performance over the link.

Source : ja.net

Disney Japan to sell movies in tiny memory cards


Disney Japan to sell movies in tiny memory cards.

Walt Disney Co's Japan unit said it would sell movies on flash memory cards as small as a fingernail so that people can watch them on mobile phones and other portable devices.

The movie studio plans to package pre-recorded microSD cards together with DVDs holding the same movie content, allowing customers to watch at home as well as on the go. These cards will be available in November.

Users can watch movies stored on microSD cards on mobile phones capable of showing terrestrial digital broadcasting, and other portable gear such as car navigation systems.

For new movies, the package of a DVD and microSD card is expected to retail for 4,935 yen ($53), about 1,000 yen higher than the DVD alone, a spokesman at the Japan unit said.

It is difficult to make a sales forecast since this would be the first time for Disney to put its movies in microSD cards, he said.

Initial titles in the microSD format include "Pirates of the Caribbean" and "National Treasure" series.

Panasonic Corp is set to provide Disney with microSD cards, the spokesman said.

SOURCE: @internet magzine

Facebook Membership Hits 250 Million


Facebook Membership Hits 250 Million.
Facebook has passed the 250 million member mark, chief executive Mark Zuckerberg announced Wednesday.
“For us, growing to 250 million users isn't just an impressive number; it is a mark of how many personal connections all of you have made, and how far we at Facebook have to go to extend the power of connection to the billions of people around the world," Zuckerberg wrote in a blog post.

The milestone comes just three months after Facebook reached 200 million members, and one month after Facebook bypassed MySpace in terms of total U.S. visitors for the first time.

“The rapid pace of our growth is humbling and exciting for us, and it affirms that people everywhere are realizing the power of staying connected to everything they care about on Facebook," Zuckerberg said.

In May, Facebook pulled in 70.278 million unique visitors in the states, compared to MySpace's 70.237 million, according to data released by ComScore. That made Facebook the most popular site in the U.S., in terms of visitors. Just a month earlier, Facebook had a little over 67 million U.S. visitors behind MySpace's 70.9 million.

SOURCE: PC Magazine

BlackBerry cries foul over UAE ‘spyware’

BlackBerry cries foul over UAE ‘spyware’
The makers of BlackBerry have charged that an update issued by UAE telecommunications company Etisalat was actually spyware, the local press reported on Wednesday.

BlackBerry's parent company Research in Motion said the software offered by Etisalat could “enable unauthorised access to private or confidential information stored on the user's smartphone,” according to a statement carried in several newspapers.

'RIM confirms that this software is not a patch and it is not a RIM-authorised upgrade. RIM did not develop this software application and RIM was not involved in any way in the testing, promotion or distribution of this software application,' it said.

There was no immediate comment from Etisalat, which offered the 'performance enhancing' patch to the 145,000 BlackBerry users on its network about two weeks ago.

The Khaleej Times newspaper said the 'snifferware' could intercept emails and drain battery life quickly, with more than 300 users reporting that the phone had been rendered useless with the battery dying in less than 60 minutes.