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The evolving switch

The evolving switch

By:  Grant Buckler  On: 11 Feb 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

Power over Ethernet, support for voice and quality of service are all features users are looking for in switches. An Info-Tech analyst advises not everyone needs Gigabit speeds

When the Alberta Auditor General’s office installed new network switches last spring, security concerns and its existing relationship with Juniper Networks, Inc., were key decision factors. Shawn Dineen, infrastructure services team leader, says the Juniper switches integrated well with other Juniper hardware already in place, and their network authentication capabilities addressed security concerns that come with handling sensitive government data.

For Winnipeg-based customs broker GHY International, future plans for voice over Internet Protocol meant quality of service provisions and Power Over Ethernet capability were concerns. Nigel Fortlage, GHY’s vice-president of information technology, wanted one way to manage the whole network, so standardized on Cisco Systems Inc.

And for Rusty Fraser, director of IT at Signature Vacations in Mississauga, Ont., reliability is vital but cost ultimately led the long-time Cisco shop to Juniper switches, saving about $40,000, Fraser says.

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Many things affect the choice of network switches.

Most people think first of speed. Today, says Mark Tauschek, senior research analyst at Info-Tech Research Group in London, Ont., the norm is gigabit per second in the network core and 100 megabits to the desktop, but increasingly, new installations supply one gigabit to the edge and 10 gigabit at the core.

Not everyone needs that, Tauschek says. and 10/100-megabit switches are still cheaper than gigabit, so Tauschek’s advice is “if you don’t need that bandwidth, then there’s really no need to spend the money on it.”

Yet lower costs lead more buyers to choose the extra speed. Dineen, for instance, says there wasn’t a pressing need for more bandwidth when he bought new switches last spring, but “the cost of gigabit switching now is so good” that his network is now all gigabit. So is Signature Vacations’ network. GHY currently uses 10/100 equipment, but Fortlage plans to move to gigabit in the core.

Layer 3 switching is also spreading from core to edge.

Switches always handle layer 2 of the OSI network model, the data link layer. But there are also multilayer switches, most commonly operating also at layer 3, the network layer.

Layer 3 capability has been most common in the core of the network, but extending it to the edge improves manageability, says Ahmed Abdelhalim product marketing manager for Ethernet switching products at Brocade Communications Systems Inc., and operating costs fall because consistency from edge to core simplifies training.


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Grant Buckler Grant Buckler is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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