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We specialize in MPLS networks!
If you run a business that has locations distributed around town, or
around the country, MPLS can help you make more money as an enterprise.
Bold statement? Yes. With MPLS you can tie all of your locations
together, eliminate carrier hardware in your telecom closet, and
prioritize all of your data traffic so that voice and video run
flawlessly - even when the network is at its busiest.
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MPLS, or Multi Protocol Label Switching, is quickly replacing frame relay and ATM as
the technology of choice for carrying high-speed data and digital
voice on a single connection. MPLS not only provides better
reliability and increased performance, but can often decrease
overall costs through increased network efficiency. Its ability to
assign priority to packets carrying voice traffic makes it the
perfect solution for carrying VoIP calls.
MPLS Basics
MPLS is a form of protocol, rather than a specific type of service.
It can be used to deliver any type of circuit that a customer needs,
from IP VPNs to optical connectivity.
Packet Labelling
The key to MPLS is its ability to label data packets. In traditional
IP networks, packets are routed based solely upon the data's
network-layer header. The arrival of each packet forces a router to
"decide" where it should go next with no regard for its actual
content.
The Need for Speed
MPLS greatly speeds up the routing process by labeling each packet
as it arrives on the network. Each network router stores information
on how to handle different packet types, as indicated by their
header label. This directly translates to higher efficiency by
lightening the load on an organization's routers and freeing up
needed resources. Speed of packet transmission is increased as the
load on network infrastructure is reduced.
Not All MPLS Traffic is Crated Equal
The inherent advantages of MPLS are most noticeable in situations
where real-time traffic is configured to be given preference over
data packets that do not require the same amount of speed or
priority. With a traditional IP circuit, all traffic is treated
equally. This becomes a critical problem when demand for bandwidth
temporarily exceeds the capacity of the circuit. The only form of
prioritization on most traditional IP networks is "first come, first
served", with no special treatment being given to real-time
sensitive traffic like voice and video conferencing.
Priority Treatment
As an example, a large e-mail attachment of personal photos being
sent to an employee's personal mail account would normally receive
the same network priority as a real-time video or audio conference
being held by company executives. The result can be phone calls or
video transmissions of inferior quality, as the two sources battle
against one another for priority. An MPLS network on the other hand
will instantly assign a high priority to real-time voice and video.
E-mail traffic and other connections that are not as likely to be
affected by latency will be pushed to the back of a router's queue
to make way for high-priority traffic. This noticeably improves the
performance of real-time applications and has a minimal effect on
lower priority traffic such as e-mail, where a delay in milliseconds
is almost impossible to detect.
Life, and Networks, Require Proper Priority
In a nutshell, MPLS puts your high-priority, mission critical IP
traffic in the fast lane to its destination. All of this is done
seamlessly, with absolutely no interaction needed on the part of the
customer and with no significant changes to their network
infrastructure. It's like having a network engineer inspecting each
and every packet on your network, and deciding how to load balance
the circuit based upon the data's importance. MPLS is truly a
value-added service that can pay for itself each and every month.
We specialize in MPLS networks! |
Top 5 Reasons To Move
To MPLS (from Network World Magazine)
1. Cost savings. Depending on the specific mix of
applications, and network configuration, MPLS-based services can
reduce costs by 10% to 25% over comparable data services (frame
relay and ATM). As companies add voice and video traffic, cost
savings can rise to as much as 40% networkwide.
2. QOS enablement. One of the primary benefits of MPLS-based
services is the ability to support QoS, particularly key for
companies that are rolling out voice and video.
3. Improved performance. Because of the any-to-any nature of
MPLS services, network designers can reduce the number of “hops”
between network points, which translates directly to increased
response time and improved application performance.
4. Disaster recovery. MPLS-based services improve disaster
recovery in a variety of ways. First and foremost, data centers and
other key sites can be connected in multiply redundant ways to the
cloud (and thus to other sites on the network). Secondly, remote
sites can quickly and easily reconnect to backup locations if needed
(unlike with ATM and frame networks, in which either switched or
backup permanent-virtual-circuits are required). That’s why several
benchmark participants listed “flexibility for business recovery” as
a key justifier behind their MPLS rollouts.
5. Futureproofing the network. Most companies have come to
the conclusion that MPLS represents “the wave of the future.”
Investment in legacy WAN services (ATM, frame) has pretty much come
to a standstill: Virtually no companies plan to invest in ATM or
frame services within the next six to 12 months. As a result,
companies increasingly say they’re planning to migrate to MPLS
primarily to avoid being left behind.
We specialize in MPLS networks! Click Here |
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