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![]() HP - Network Integration Services fulfillment piece |
Making your net work | |
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One of a number of guides on key IT issues, this paper set out HP’s take on the networking revolution. Drawing on HP’s first hand experience of planning, implementing, operating and managing complex networks, it gave businesses sound advice on how to make networks work for them. As part of its 10th birthday celebrations, the Media Lab demonstrated that it is possible to pass data through the human body. A shake of the hand and the data stored on one person's business card can be transferred into another's computer. We live in interesting times. Without doubt some of the most interesting, not to say complex, developments are going on in the area of networking. More and more computer power is shifting to the desktop and on into our hands. But to make the most of all this distributed power you need fast, flexible, clever networks. Moreover, you need them to tie in with exactly what your business wants to do. Speed, flexibility and intelligence is being built into networks at a rapid pace and in a bewildering number of ways. There are many different routes open to you. Take the right one and your business will enjoy all the competitive advantages that come from being able to exchange information and capture knowledge - fast. Advantages such as more streamlined processes; shorter times to market; new ways of working more productively; a leaner, fitter organisation; a better understanding of customer requirements and how to meet them. Take a wrong turning, and you're headed for disappointment, or worse. At HP, we plan, implement, operate and manage complex networks day in, day out. Drawing on this first hand experience, we have put together some guidelines for the networking revolution. We hope you find them illuminating. "We have seen computers move out of giant air-conditioned rooms into closets, then onto desktops, and now into our laps and pockets. But this is not the end. Early in the next millennium your right and left cuff links or earrings may communicate with each other by low-orbiting satellites and have more computing power than your present PC. Your telephone won't ring indiscriminately; it will receive, sort and perhaps respond to your incoming calls like a well-trained English butler." Nicholas Negroponte - Being Digital
Getting the foundations right
If there's one overriding preoccupation in the world of networking it
is the need for speed. Today's businesses are increasingly flatter,
looser, more dispersed organisations but all too often the distributed
networks that mirror and serve them fail to match up. Businesses want to
be able to use and exchange richer, more interesting forms of information:
video, 3D images and the like. Yet data hungry applications such as
videoconferencing eat up bandwidth. The power is on our desktops; the
bottlenecks lurk between. More bandwidth is certainly on the way but speed should not be pursued
for speed's sake alone. You can make networks faster. At a price. Can you
afford it? More importantly, do you need it? The best approach is to put
potential multimegabits per second to one side and start by taking a long
hard look at what your business needs to do. If you have high speed
workgroups they'll need high speed technology. If, on the other hand,
parts of your organisation only shift relatively small amounts of data,
slower technology will more than suffice. You might think cabling is only bits of wire, and not very expensive
bits at that. But the cabling infrastructure is probably the single most important
part of your whole network. It is certainly the most difficult and
disruptive to change - if you're ripping up floors it's not going to be
easy for you to get down to business. Unless you get the cabling infrastructure right you are in danger of
investing a considerable amount of money in the proverbial castle in the
sand. But if you do get it right you will have solid foundations upon
which to build whatever network your business needs - and to keep on
changing it as your business evolves. At Amen Corner, HP was one of the first businesses in the UK to plan,
implement operate and manage a structured cabling solution. The upfront
investment has paid considerable dividends. The business has moved from
proprietary systems to a mixed client/server environment; network speeds
have increased from 10Mb/s to 100Mb/s. The cabling has stayed the same. As well as coping with dramatic changes in technology the
infrastructure has made it very cheap and easy to move people around
within the organisation. At Amen Corner, it costs an average of between
£200 and £350 compared with the industry average of £656. Because of its obvious advantages, the structured cabling approach is
now accepted as the smartest way to lay network foundations. But what
should sit on top of the structure? The short answer is network
technology, applications and services that boost your business
performance. To give you a more detailed reply, in the following pages we
explore some of the burning issues surrounding networking. There are a number of existing technologies to consider... Ethernet dates back to the 60s, to the days when computers had 16K
memory, a database was a big box of cards, and 1Mb/s was very fast indeed.
Does Ethernet still have a role to play in today's multimegabit world, let
alone tomorrow's information superhighway? The answer is yes, but... Switched Ethernet, fast Ethernet (100Base-T), switched fast Ethernet -
there are a number of ways Ethernet is being pushed beyond the current
10Mb/s standard. A lot of companies are making the transition in stages,
perhaps connecting their servers to 100Mb/s Ethernet switches surrounded
by clusters of clients using the standard 10Mb/s. But the drawback of all
these variations is the inherent drawback of Ethernet technology: it is
collision based and hence prone to network bottlenecks. Not so widely deployed as Ethernet but nevertheless with a fair chunk
of the market and a loyal customer base, Token Ring technology shows every
sign of staying on the networking scene. As with Ethernet, there now are a
number of switching products for Token Ring that increase its speed beyond
the two standard options: 4Mb/s and 16Mb/s. Invented by HP at its Bristol laboratories, 100VG AnyLAN is compatible
with Ethernet and other LAN technologies yet it has a number of qualities
that make it stand out. First, it is not collision based; it uses a demand
priority protocol which allows for much better data traffic control.
Second, it can deliver 100Mb/s over category 3 (voice grade) cable. And
third, it is scalable - 100Mb/s is the current standard but HP is working
on increasing this to more than 500Mb/s and of course switching further
boosts the speed. Fast, cost-effective and clever, 100VG AnyLAN is perhaps the best
example of how existing LAN technologies are being pushed as far as they
can go. To put this in an everyday context, take a client/server music
video application. When you run it over standard Ethernet, this happens:
with one client, it's OK; with two, it's jerky; with three, forget it. Run
the same application over 100VG AnyLAN and with 25 clients it's still
perfect. Alongside existing LAN technologies is ATM, the so called universal
transport mechanism for voice, data and images - the tarmac for the
information highway. Yet just how much ATM tarmac will be laid, and where,
is still unclear. There are standards, but only in draft form. There is
speed, but with significant costs attached. And there is LAN capability,
but only through LAN emulation. The probability is that ATM will provide the backbone with LAN
technologies hanging off it. It might run through a building but will
rarely pop up on the desktop. It's vital to take the right LAN planning, implementation, operation
and management decisions. But an equally pressing issue is how best to
join these LAN islands together into a fast and effective enterprise wide
network. After all, there's little point in colleagues in the same
building holding a video conference, but when these people are separated
by thousands of miles it's a whole different ball game. There are a number of positive factors helping to realise what The
Economist has called the death of distance. As well as technological
developments such as ATM, downward pressure is being exerted on the cost
of wide area communications. With cable companies competing against
traditional telecommunications providers and new specialist LAN
interconnection companies emerging, tying together LANs now involves less
money and more choice. Alongside private wide area networks sits the public Internet and its
star attraction the World Wide Web. The explosion of the Net has made a
lot of businesses aware that they can get a lot of business value out of
networking outside their organisations. But just how reliable, secure and
fast is it? Built to withstand a nuclear attack, Net technology is undoubtedly
robust. To build on its inherent technical strengths, work is being done
to increase security and reliability. The real problem with the net is not
its technology, it is its popularity. With current conservative estimates
of Net users running at more than 30 million people, sheer weight of
traffic creates congestion. Hence, for most businesses the Net will
continue to be a valuable part but by no means the whole of their
networking solution. While the Internet has grabbed headlines, it's the Intranet that has
turned the heads of many businesses. Intranets take Internet technology
and apply it to private enterprise wide networks. Via a company wide web
people can log onto sites, transfer files and download information in the
same way that they would on the World Wide Web. The difference is an
instant response rather than the all too familiar delays experienced on
the Net. Technically, fibre is the most effective way to deliver data at very
high speeds to the desk and in some specialist areas it is certainly
appropriate. But it is also costly. The costs of the fibre itself are
coming down; the termination costs, on the other hand, are always going to
be comparatively high - precision alignment of light signals is not the
same as terminating a piece of wire. Typically, it costs £50 to £100 to
terminate fibre, whereas with UTP it's a matter of pence. The other area
of additional cost with fibre is that you have to convert from light
signals to electrical signals. Where fibre often comes into its own is in making the connections
between buildings rather than within them. As speeds of 100Mb/s to the
desktop are becoming more common, the pressure on the backbone inevitably
builds up. The relationship isn't a straight multiple - a lot of data
traffic remains within four walls - but nevertheless speeds of a Gigabit
or more between buildings will soon be called for. It's a challenging
target, given that multi-mode fibre is currently limited to 100Mb/s over
2km. As Steve Wright, Manager, HP Network Technology, says: "There is
always a trade-off between cost, complexity and pragmatism. We're looking
for a pragmatic solution that will allow us to increase the speed."
Hence HP is working hard on multi-mode fibre systems in order to squeeze
more performance out of them. HP is also working on Gigabits of data
throughput on fibre in the laboratory environment. These are just a couple
of examples of how HP is building up its knowledge of existing solutions
to extend the use and value of what businesses already have. Just how cordless will it be? The concept of the cordless office is a highly attractive one: who
wouldn't appreciate being able to move freely within a building while
still staying in contact and exchanging information? Cordless phone
systems are now fairly well established. But cutting the cord on more
bandwidth hungry data communications is not so easy. No matter which cordless technology you use, whether radio or infrared,
there is a trade-off between bandwidth and range. As a result, there are
limits to how much and how far data can be carried without wires. HP is
working to push these limits as far as they can go. But, as Rod Eggleton,
HP Network Integration Services, points out: "The chances are that
the cordless office of the future will still be extremely corded." Structured cabling will remain as the foundation. What will disappear
is the need to permanently attach your PC and peripherals to a socket via
a wire. In its place, a virtual wireless plug will connect you from
wherever you are to the grid of wires beneath your feet, around the walls
and in the ceiling void. Structured cabling has already made it a lot easier and cheaper to move
people from location to location - from data socket to data socket. By
doing away with the data sockets but keeping the wires under the floors,
you can give people complete flexibility to move throughout the building
and stay on-line. Moving around and staying on-line is fine, so long as you're not
weighed down by what you take with you. Thankfully, the trend is for ever
smaller, more powerful and versatile computing. As an example, the latest
version of Omnigo, HP's palmtop PC can neatly accommodate a Nokia GSM
phone - data and voice communications in the palm of your hand. "With this technology we can have organisations where everybody is
fully informed and constantly in touch with each other." The limits of today's networking technologies are being steadily
extended; new technologies are emerging. Interesting times indeed. Yet,
whether old or new and no matter how exciting, the technologies are
nothing on their own. Their role, as with every other area of IT, is to
better serve businesses and people. To make your network work hard for your business, you first need to
know what you want it to do. Only then can you carry out the necessary
network planning, implementation, operation and management. To make the
most of tomorrow's networks, informed business driven decisions are the
order of the day. If you would like to know more about any of the issues raised in this
guide, or to discuss your networking plans, we'd like to help.
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