Exclusive New Research from the Telecom Leader

Survey stats * market share * real world deployments * and more

Now with two ways to buy…

      Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines   
   Comments

In the Spotlight: Virtela's Bill Dodds

more on the topic

More Related Articles

As a managed service provider, Virtela operates a virtual network, using the physical facilities from a broad array of partners to serve multinational corporations, including the increasingly popular undersea cable routes. The recent cable cuts in the Mideast raised concerns about the security and reliability of global networks and services, which Virtela Co-President Bill Dodds discussed with Editor-in-Chief Carol Wilson.

On the likelihood of four cable cuts in one area: I haven’t seen multiple ships take out multiple cables before. I know there are some things that we don’t yet know, but this wasn’t something we’ve seen before.

On the impact at Virtela: Our monitoring system sends out alarms. We are constantly monitoring all of our paths. We took alarms and started addressing it right away. We started moving everybody’s traffic onto other routes. For the first 10 minutes, it looked like a regular alarm, then we started getting multiple alarms.

On the possibility of traffic outages: We have multiple routes out of our regional policy centers. They are all on different carriers. It is standard operating procedure for us on a service disruption or high latency to re-route customers over another backbone link, with about an 80 millisecond re-route delay.

On the impact of this outage: We were pretty fortunate -- a couple of our service providers had good redundancy. We have land-based alternatives to undersea cables. For two to three hours, we saw 10 to 20 milliseconds of additional latency. That is pretty insignificant compared to a hard down.

On the advantages of a ‘virtual’ network: We have multiple paths between all of our nodes. A facilities-based provider might have to re-route on less desirable path -- they may have to go around the globe to get back to the other side. Our path is on the same geography so our latency is less. For example, if the cut is on the link between Mumbai to London, we are still routed from Mumbai to London, just on another provider. Someone else might have to go through North America to get from Mumbai to London. We definitely believe in our architecture model. I don’t want to say we’re great and everyone else stinks. But events like this [multiple cable cuts] are the kinds of things that prove that facilities-based folks are a lilt more exposed because they don’t have access to other carriers’ backbones.

Over general concerns about this grouping of cable cuts in the Middle East: I do believe the telecom community is on high alert. That is a unique part of the world – there are not a lot of good cable routes in that part of the world because of the political situation. You wouldn’t see this kind of isolation if it happened in North America, the Asia Pacific or Latin America. We are still waiting to see what happened. It could just be a nasty coincidence.

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2009 Penton Media Inc.

  • Telephony Content


blog comments powered by Disqus
Get Updates Via Email
  • Telephony Content

related resources

popular articles

Webcasts

WEBCAST

Reduce Customer Churn and Cut Costs Webcast | July 22, 2009

Learn the best practices for online customer billing and service – how to implement a paperless bill, drive traffic to your web site, improve customer service.

REGISTER NOW

White Papers

WHITE PAPER

Automated End-to-End Managed Service Delivery. Sponsored by Ciena.

Ciena’s industry-leading CoreDirector Multiservice Optical Switch with FastMesh® has been used for efficient and robust core switching in the world’s largest networks. DOWNLOAD NOW

Podcasts

PODCAST

Wikimedia explores the phone as encyclopedia

Kul Wadhwa, head of business development, Wikimedia Foundation, discusses with senior editor Kevin Fitchard the Wikipedia’s future on the mobile phone. LISTEN

Blogs

BLOG

I-feature: Readers respond

As promised, a key component of Telephony’s new Interactive Featureis reader participation READ

E-Books

Telephony May Special Section: Carrier Ethernet

No slowdown in sight!

Read how carrier Ethernet is defying the slow economy. DOWNLOAD NOW!

  • Telephony Content
  • Telephony Content

commentary

Carol Wilson
Energy bill should energize change

June 29, 2009

Read Now

Carol Wilson
Steve Hilton
Ask Steve

June 29, 2009

Read Now

Steve Hilton

Recent Comments

Follow comments on Telephony

More ways to stay informed

Find us on Facebook

follow us on twitter

Browse Issues

  • June 1, 2009
  • October 1, 2008
  • April 1, 2009
  • March 1, 2009
  • February 1, 2009
  • January 1, 2009
  • December 1, 2008