Holualoa, Hawaii Free hawaii resources. Bookmark This Site
Set As Home Page
Holualoa, Hawaii



hawaii vacation
hawaii travel
hawaii hotel
hawaii real estate
hawaii wedding
hawaii weather
hawaii cruise
hawaii resort
hawaii vacation package
hawaii map
hawaii vacation rental
university of hawaii
hawaii flower
hawaii honeymoon
kauai hawaii
hawaii picture
hawaii news
kona hawaii
bankruptcy hawaii law
hawaii tour
hawaii beach
state of hawaii
hawaii mortgage
big island hawaii
bank of hawaii
hawaii island
flight to hawaii
hawaii newspaper
hawaii airline
california cruise from hawaii
discount hawaii honeymoon
hawaii volcano
cheap airline ticket to hawaii
wedding in hawaii
hawaii leis
hawaii car rental
university of hawaii at manoa
hawaii history
hawaii pacific university
hawaii honeymoon package
hawaii shopping
honeymoon in hawaii
hawaii jobs
hilo hawaii
all inclusive hawaii vacation
hawaii condo
hawaii attorney
hawaii home loan
hawaii flood
hawaii airfare
honolulu hawaii real estate
hawaii web cam
hawaii fishing
hawaii rental
hawaii site
hawaii photo
hawaii trip
hawaii university
hawaii bed and breakfast
hawaii vacation rental home
hawaii zip code
volcano in hawaii
destination wedding hawaii
hawaii girl
hawaii home
hawaii fact
hawaii golf
hawaii information
hawaii tourism
hawaii five o
hilo hawaii real estate
west hawaii today
cheap hawaii vacation
hawaii all inclusive
hawaii vacation home
hawaii dam
hawaii island map
hawaii tribune herald
hawaii accommodation
hawaii beach cottage
hawaii education
jobs in hawaii
car transport to hawaii
hawaii condo rental
hawaii home for sale
rental apartment honolulu hawaii
hawaii flower tattoo
hawaii health
kailua kona hawaii real estate
hawaii beach front condo
vacation home rental maui hawaii
hawaii home luxury rental vacation
holualoa
tour holualoa
holualoa inn
holualoa restaurant
holualoa mortgage
holualoa hawaii
holualoa hotel




Contact:

Feel free to contact us if you think we should add something to this website that is currently missing or if you would like to report a mistake on our site.

Click here to send us an email.

Thank you.


hawaii accommodation

VPNs make waves in the islands - University of Hawaii system - Technology Information

Hawaii bandwidth shortage relieved with optical wavelength solution.

To accommodate the growing communications needs of users throughout the Hawaiian Islands, a collaboration emerged among state organizations--the University of Hawaii system (University of Hawaii and Community Colleges), the Hawaii Department of Education (DOE) serving the state's K-12 public schools, and the government offices of the state--to interconnect geographically remote locations with a common communications infrastructure. The mission of Hawaii's Institutional NETwork (INET) initiative is to plan and build cost-effective, scalable networks.

On the main island of Oahu, the initial network was configured with two independent and interconnected fiber-optic backbone rings covering a wide geographic area. These two rings are owned and maintained by this state consortium.

The INET rings used a SONET OC-12 (622 Mbps) on only two fibers provided by Oceanic Cable, Hawaii's cable television provider.

Reallocation of existing bandwidth was difficult because each consortium member would have to agree on changes. Further, new data service requirements, such as Gigabit Ethernet, could not be handled easily by the SONET OC-12 and threatened to consume much of the existing capacity. Additional capacity was required beyond that which OC-12 could support. The question was how to cost-effectively upgrade network capacity and speed when an existing operating infrastructure is already in place.

The consortium decided to investigate solutions that would meet the diverse requirements of each member. While varying in specifics, the general proposals presented to INET by various traditional equipment vendors were to upgrade the OC-12 network to SONET OC-48 (2.48 Gbps). Aside from the expense and time needed to implement this complete system overhaul, two other user needs were not addressed by the SONET solution.

First, upgrading the SONET network would not solve the problem and contention of shared bandwidth. Second, each entity had different voice and data requirements--ranging from T-1 service to 10/100 ethernet to Gigabit Ethernet. While T-1 service is easily mapped into SONET, the various data services would require SONET framing, an inefficient use of the available bandwidth. Two Gigabit Ethernet applications would nearly consume the entire OC-48 bandwidth.

LuxN, Sunnyvale, CA, proposed an entirely different solution, based on the company's physical layer wave division multiplexing capability. By assigning services to different wavelengths, the company provided a high-bandwidth solution that was flexible in nature and that coexisted with the OC-12 SONET network. More importantly, it also allowed modularity in service and bandwidth, so that each of the INET members could manage its own independent private network requirements, while sharing the same fiber pair. As an added benefit, INET's network could be upgraded quickly and without disrupting the existing OC-12 network traffic.

After considering the various proposals, the INET group selected this solution over the more traditional SONET system upgrade. Cost and speed of implementation were key criteria in choosing the solution. This system could be expanded easily by any current node or future location without impacting the existing services of other INET members.

"We wanted an optical networking solution, not a SONET networking solution," says David Lassner, information technology services director at the University of Hawaii. "We now have the capability to manage any of our growth needs incrementally. Of particular interest was the system's accommodation of a variety of traffic protocols. In our view, this will assure easy system expansion and be cost-effective, as well."

This proposal keeps the existing OC-12 SONET network in place, carrying traffic using the 1310 nm wavelength. For new bandwidth requirements, native data traffic is multiplexed onto the ring at various ITU 1550 nm wavelengths. In essence, multiple virtual private networks (VPNs) were created over one pair of fiber.

The basic building block of the solution is the WavStation, which can currently support a variety of traffic types on each of 16 different wavelengths. For the Hawaii INET project, only four of the 16 wavelengths (operating up to gigabit speeds) were required to meet the current needs. Flexibility is built into the system, however, allowing INET to incrementally increase capacity as needed, simply by adding additional wavelengths via a new pair of channel cards.

WavStation supports T-1, 10/100 ethernet, Fibre Channel, SONET OC-3/12/ 48 and Gigabit Ethernet. Because LuxN operates at the Layer 1 level, it can transport these services in their native format at full line speed. No framing of data is required.

The simplicity of this solution is that the department of education, the state government, and the University of Hawaii system can easily manage their own VPNs while sharing the same infrastructure. At any site along the ring, individual wavelengths (service channels) can be added or dropped. This allows complete flexibility in delivering services to any point in the ring, without disrupting other data channels/wavelengths, which are passively sent through the LuxN equipment.

The INET rings, as they exist today on the island of Oahu, span 27 locations and 170 miles. Future expansion, using submarine links, is planned for the islands of Maui, Kauai and Hawaii, and the DOE is planning additional school sites on the Oahu ring. All of this makes Hawaii well prepared for future bandwidth needs.

www.luxn.com

Circle 258 for more information from LuxN

COPYRIGHT 2001 Nelson Publishing
COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group



Copyright © Holualoa, Hawaii. All Rights Reserved.
Click here for a Google map of the last visitors.
This site has been developed by dnbroker.us.