
:: Connectivity
The Website Worker
Network Operations Center is OnNet with GlobalCenter
(GC), Qwest Communications and GTE through three
separate bandwidth-on-demand connections which
enter in our building.

Connected
to Three Backbones
GC, a Tier 1 provider
whose 13,000-mile fiber optic network and Dense
Wave Division Multiplexing (DWDM) technology provide
an enormous 460 gigabytes per second (Gbps) of
capacity worldwide, has an Asynchronous Transfer
Mode (ATM) fiber node located just a few floors
below the Website Worker NOC.
Qwest comes in
with an OC-12 line and plans to upgrade their
connection to an OC-48 in the near future. They
also have an ATM fiber node floors below the Website Worker
NOC. Our Qwest connection enables Website Worker
to offer additional redundancy and better routes
to Europe, Latin America and Asia. With our carriers,
our router has up to 150,000 possible routes to
send each packet of traffic.
Genuity, a division
of GTE, is our third Tier One Internet backbone.
Genuity provides excellent network performance
as a result of their high-speed peering arrangements
with other Tier One Internet backbone providers.
The GTE global network delivers customers directly
onto the Internet via a high-speed connection
to its private, super-capacity backbone, including
17,000 miles of fiber and OC192 capacity. It is
comprised of more than 800 U.S. local access points
and approximately 1,500 international local access
points in more than 150 countries.
Furthermore, because
of these unique connections, Website Worker does
not need to link to the Internet though an OC3
or T3 Telecom circuit. Instead, independent cables
run inside our building directly from the Website Worker
NOC to all three carriers points of presence.
These lines can handle the bandwidth of a T3 or
an OC3 with DWDM. Plus, they handle several times
the bandwidth of an OC3. Whatever your bandwidth
needs may be, Website Worker has the scalability
to meet them.
Network
Redundancy
Website Worker uses
intelligent end-user routing software called Border
Gateway Protocol (BGP), between Qwest, GC and
GTE, who use the same protocol. BGP identifies
which path is the most efficient for each data
packet and then routes the packet to its destination
on the fastest path. This increases the speed
at which web pages sent from our NOC arrive at
their destination.
Studies have shown
that the most common reason for downtime is circuit
failure on Tier 1 provider backbones, the major
data highways. To guard against this potential
problem, we have three Tier-1 providers. If one
experiences problems, we can route traffic down
the other one. Furthermore, because we are OnNet
with GlobalCenter, Qwest and GTE, we share their
digital distribution architecture, which @includes
private peering network connections to major Internet
carriers such as MCI, Sprint, UUNET, EUNET, AT&T,
AOL, Best, Erols, @Home, IBM Advantis and others.
These private peering arrangements allow Website Worker
to exchange packets of data with every major backbone
carrier in a one-to-one environment quickly and
efficiently.
In addition, GC
has high-speed links to eight public exchanges
including both MAE East and West and several NAPS.
Through these public exchanges, customers have
the ability to reach their site, no matter from
where they are coming on the Internet.
Network
Reliability
Industry analysis
reveals that 70% of downtime over ten hours with
any ISP is caused by telephone circuit failure.
Since our NOC is in the same building as Global
Center, Qwest and GTE, circuit failure is virtually
eliminated because there is no phone circuit between
us and our providers. Instead, there is a direct
connection between our Cisco 7500 routers and
theirs.
Website Worker's providers
also have peering connections with other major
Tier 1 providers, which allows traffic to be switched
to alternate backbones should the need arise.
Raw
Performance Equals
Low Latency/High Throughput
Too often providers
operate their networks at three to four times
responsible capacity. As a result, their corresponding
transfer times reach over 300ms. Website Worker's
network daily average is 27% of its capacity,
with midday peak spikes reaching only 33% capacity.
Website Worker guarantees clients will be carried
off our network in less than 80ms over a five
minute average at any time of day or night.
|