© XchangePoint 2001 Growing Your IP Business by Addressing Your Customers’ Broadband Content Needs Keith Mitchell Chief Technical Officer Global IP Carriers Conference 19th April 2002
© XchangePoint 2001 Overview Customer Needs and Drivers The Kendra Way Forward Broadband Capacity and Connectivity Case Study: XchangePoint’s Interconnect Platform Conclusions, Questions
© XchangePoint 2001 Customer Needs and Drivers
© XchangePoint 2001 Growing Your IP Business Your Broadband Content Customers: Small/Medium ISPs Hosting Providers Content Providers Content Distributors/Aggregators ASP, Portal, Domain Name Providers Corporates/Enterprises Consumers
© XchangePoint 2001 The Business Needs of Broadband Content Customers Revenue generation Meet existing business models Cost reduction Quality of service, backed up by SLAs Supplier choice and diversity Flexible contracts Stable relationships Fast provisioning
© XchangePoint 2001 Technical Needs of Broadband Content Customers High resilience and availability Low latency High throughput Efficient content distribution via caches via multicast System and network security Optimal mixture of peering and transit connectivity
© XchangePoint 2001 Where are your Broadband Content Customers ? Neutral co-location facilities Carrier co-location facilities Close to established Internet Peering Points (IPPs) Corporate data centres Close to off-line content industry centres On the end of an ADSL/Cable Modem/UMTS connection This discussion will focus on first 3 (highest volume) categories
© XchangePoint 2001 Why do Content Customers cluster ? Choice of ISPs who locate backbone nodes in single building operated by co-location provider Cheap in-building connections to IPPs over point-to-point private interconnections Interconnect operator need not be same organisation as co- location provider MAN bandwidth much cheaper and faster than WAN Improved throughput and latency performance Critical mass of suppliers in single location creates competitive market in provision of capacity, transit and services
© XchangePoint 2001 Drivers for Growth Growth in the number of customers connected to Internet may have tailed off But their demand for bandwidth is getting broader: faster end-station connections bandwidth intensive applications such as video Web and application hosting permanent connections Looks like 200%/year traffic growth is not unrealistic Successful providers need to cope with and exploit this
© XchangePoint 2001 A Key Growth Driver - Traffic Source: LINX
© XchangePoint 2001 Observations Key to survival and success in current market conditions is to address users’ service requirements This does not need to be complex Internet broadband capacity is crucial Revenue will grow, even if not at same %age rate as traffic Cost-efficiency of bandwidth provision very important
© XchangePoint 2001 Meeting Broadband Consumers’ Needs Give them the content they want and are prepared to pay for Make it easy for them technically Improve viewing experience Open standards Make it easy for them commercially Don’t constrain payment models Compatible payments standards and systems
© XchangePoint 2001 Meeting Content Providers’ Needs Deliver their content efficiently over your network General purpose delivery tools Multicast Application-neutral caching architecture Use public IPPs Give them flexibility and a good deal Interconnect platform Enable them to obtain revenue from selling content This pays your bills too !
© XchangePoint 2001 The Kendra Way Forward
© XchangePoint 2001 The Kendra Initiative Research project investigating transport layer for distribution and delivery of high bandwidth content over the Internet Promotion - bringing together content creators/owners and specialists from industry and academia Running trials - global content distribution system
© XchangePoint 2001 The Kendra Initiative - Vision Provide: n Consumers n Content Creators/Aggregators n Service Providers n Hardware/Software Vendors with a framework that will allow these organisations and individuals to be rewarded for their efforts n Create an open and freely available content delivery architecture with no barriers to participation in its creation n Build a system that allows users to pay for content n Provide an alternative to the current spate of old-Napster type peer-to-peer systems
© XchangePoint 2001 The Kendra Initiative: Current Status Discussion lists up and running Promotion continues through Kendra Participants speaking at trade events Network Trial up and running Aims to enable interoperability between different content delivery networks
© XchangePoint 2001 The Kendra Initiative & Multicast Multicast is a key technology for enabling efficient distribution of content over Internet Technical solutions exist, but need to drive this to production deployment Important component of The Kendra System's content delivery topology Wrapping multicast up as a component of a viable content delivery business model
© XchangePoint 2001 Multicast Applications Multicasting is, as yet, an un-tapped opportunity! “natural” users of multicast > high bandwidth requirements “conferencing” applications make stringent demands of network resources / capabilities “distribution” applications, e.g. Internet TV, multiple site file updates, etc. are very effective over multicast Important to note the increase in current network efficiencies as a consequence of implementing Multicast Too much emphasis has been placed on broadband media rich content
© XchangePoint 2001 Broadband Capacity and Connectivity
© XchangePoint 2001 Ways of Obtaining Broadband Internet Capacity Transit: One provider agrees to give another’s customers access to the whole Internet they always charge for this ! usually volume and/or capacity based typically across private interconnects, with SLA Peering: Two providers agree to provide access to each others’ customers commonly no money changes hands: “settlement free” barter of perceived equal value simple commercial agreements traditionally across public peering points, no SLA Other models exist
© XchangePoint 2001 What Are Optimal Connectivity Arrangements ? How many Transit providers ? 1 is not resilient enough 4 is probably too complex - non-deterministic routing and failure modes use bandwidth brokers or transit aggregators ? do they have a stable future ? how easy is it to change providers ? Is Peering worth doing ? Public or Private interconnection ? Best insurance is to be able to have flexible interconnect arrangements with multiple providers
© XchangePoint 2001 Public and Private Interconnect Public Interconnect Internet Peering Point (“IPP” or “IXP” or “NAP”) multiple parties connect to shared switched fabric commonly Ethernet based many-to-many connectivity Private Interconnect single circuit dedicated between two parties typically used for transit Virtual Interconnect
© XchangePoint 2001 The Evolving Interconnect Market
© XchangePoint 2001 Advantages of Virtual Interconnect Lower cost than WDM/SDH private interconnect Easy migration path from public peering through to private interconnect Can mix public and private services on same port Ability to combine and present multiple services on same port Faster provisioning of services Greater flexibility
© XchangePoint 2001 XchangePoint’s Broadband Interconnect Platform
© XchangePoint 2001 Architecture Overview Present at multiple co-location sites per city Dark fibre metro ring connecting all sites in city Ethernet switches at all sites DWDM equipment at major sites Gigabit Ethernet between switches and sites 10-Gigabit capable
© XchangePoint 2001 Ethernet Switches 2 Black Diamond/Alpine Ethernet switches at each site All switches are non-blocking Each switch at each site connected to one of two separate wavelength overlay networks
© XchangePoint 2001 DWDM Configuration system supports 32 protected wavelengths ( ) per fibre ring Initial configuration 8 3 for backbone 5 for customer OPIs Remaining can be used to increase backbone or OPI capacity in 1Gb/s or 10Gb/s increments
© XchangePoint 2001 Interconnect Platform Advantages for Content Customers Improves Internet connectivity resilience and bandwidth Reduces provider to consumer hop-count, latency Simplifies the IPP joining procedures allows content providers to interconnect efficiently Creates ready market for buying capacity/transit from carriers/ISP in single location
© XchangePoint 2001 Service Status London network has been live for over 10 months Service trial completed successfully Now 25 customers, generating revenue Peaking >150Mb/s traffic Have met SLA targets throughout Paris and Frankfurt planned during 2002
© XchangePoint 2001 Conclusions, Questions
© XchangePoint 2001 Conclusions There are growth opportunities with content customers, but the technical and commercial models need to evolve Kendra is one vision of how to do this Internet broadband capacity is key Cost-efficiency of bandwidth provision very important Multicast important element of this More open standards work needed on both content distribution and payment systems
© XchangePoint 2001 Conclusions Address broadband content customers’ needs via: Addressing their service quality requirements Flexible interconnect arrangements Single presentation of combinations of interconnect services Virtual interconnect services Sell transit via interconnect platforms
© XchangePoint 2001 Questions ?
© XchangePoint 2001 Contact Details Keith Mitchell Daniel Harris Presentation: Paper: kendra-an-introduction-draft-current.html