[9753] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: connectivity outside the US
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Chris Whittenburg)
Sat May 31 20:26:00 1997
From: chris.whittenburg@wcom.com (Chris Whittenburg)
To: jesse@netthink.com (Jesse Caulfield)
Date: Sat, 31 May 1997 17:52:27 -0500 (CDT)
Cc: nanog@merit.edu
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.3.95.970531153104.8354B-100000@k5.netthink.com> from "Jesse Caulfield" at May 31, 97 03:46:12 pm
>
> Transoceanic cables are actually designed with massive capacity. They're
> terribly expensive to lay and maintain though, and demand for
> communications has kept good pace with available space - keeping the
> price of transit high.
>
Worldcom and Cable & Wireless are in the process of laying a 20 Gbps
transatlantic sonet (DWDM) system which they claim doubles the current
transatlantic capacity. The southern route should be done by November
of this year with the first capacity available for the end of the year.
The northern route, which will close the ring, will be done in '98.
Before we bought them, MFS had already started working on a ring
around europe and metro area networks in several cities over there.
All this means that we should see a significant drop in trans-
atlantic bandwidth (and even intra-europe) charges in the near
future.
The full press release on this (called project Gemini) should
be available on www.wcom.com or nasdaq.com.
regards,chris
--
Chris Whittenburg
Data Network Mechanic (918) 590-5845
Worldcom Inc. chris.whittenburg@wcom.com