Soumettre la recherche
Mettre en ligne
12.1 lunch break
•
0 j'aime
•
434 vues
William Norton
Suivre
Affichage du diaporama
Signaler
Partager
Affichage du diaporama
Signaler
Partager
1 sur 1
Télécharger maintenant
Télécharger pour lire hors ligne
Recommandé
13.1 internet exchange-point-playbook
13.1 internet exchange-point-playbook
William Norton
15.1 transition create-peering-strategy
15.1 transition create-peering-strategy
William Norton
05 the business-case-for-internet-peering
05 the business-case-for-internet-peering
William Norton
An overview explaining the reasons fo peering at Internet Exchange Points (IXPs), versus IP Transit, and the known benefits and uses of both approaches to a network blend. The presentation brings to light the decline in pricing of IP Transit and what this means for the financial benefits that peering used to offer and how remote peering (or virtual connectivity at Internet Exchanges) continues to alter this landscape. It also highlights how remote peering has changed the way network operators exchange traffic and made peering more accessible to smaller/medium sized companies and developing markets, by removing the initial barriers in terms of legal, billing and technical; simplifying the whole process of expanding a network. Developing markets are also discussed, such as the Middle East, and the peering paradigm of 'keeping local traffic local' Vs virtually/remotely connecting to Internet Exchanges and the issues with both. It touches on the shift in the industry and how Internet Exchanges and Data Centres are behaving more like networks and vice versa, explaining the new Central European Peering Hub project by LU-CIX - with IX Reach as the first carrier partner - whereby they encourage members to join major Internet Exchanges (DE-CIX, LINX, France-IX and AMS-IX) via their Internet Exchange platform.
Remote Internet Peering Vs IP Transit: A Shift in Internet Architecture
Remote Internet Peering Vs IP Transit: A Shift in Internet Architecture
Ruth Plater
13 the taxonomy-of-internet-data-centers
13 the taxonomy-of-internet-data-centers
William Norton
This brief discussion talk brings forth and supports the thesis that Internet Peering improves network security.
How Internet Peering Improves Security
How Internet Peering Improves Security
William Norton
Understanding Remote Peering – The New Wave of Interconnection at the Core of the Internet. Using real-world case studies, this free webinar explains remote peering and what it means to ISPs, content providers and the global Internet peering ecosystem. Learn from William B. Norton who has presented three popular USTelecom webinars on Internet peering. Background The Internet peering ecosystem is going through a historic and rapid paradigm shift. The largest ISPs and content providers have always interconnected their networks at the core of the Internet using a technique called "Internet peering," the free and reciprocal exchange of access to each other's customers. In this way, networks of scale can exchange a large enough amount of traffic for free with one another to offset the cost of deployment (equipment, colocation, and transport to the colocation center). This justification is the basis for the business case for peering. However, a recent trend -- called "remote peering" -- has emerged as a way to get these peering benefits but without the cost of additional equipment, transport, or colocation. The remote peering model is where a remote peering provider delivers transport to the customer router with Virtual Local Area Network (VLAN) extension(s) from the largest exchange points in the world. In this way, the customer gets all of the benefits of peering (performance, control over routing, direct relationships with the peer networks, etc.) without the large initial capital and operational costs. This is not just a fringe or small change to peering - it is a fundamental shift in the Internet architecture. Remote peering is a new technique that helps make peering accessible to a much larger population. As a result of the cost shift, an increasing percentage of networks are peering across great distances. The peering paradigm of "peering keeps local traffic local" is no more. During the free webinar you will hear case studies from the field where medium-sized content companies are able to enter the peering ecosystem and connect to multiple Internet Exchange Points over a single circuit. These companies have graciously allowed their cost numbers to be shared so the traditional peering model can be compared against the emerging remote peering model. Also, the webinar will highlight the strongest arguments on both sides of the debate over whether remote peering is good or bad for the global Internet peering ecosystem. William B. Norton, Executive Director, DrPeering International and Author of the new 2014 Edition of “The Internet Peering Playbook: Connecting to the Core of the Internet” which includes a new chapter dedicated to remote peering.
Understanding Remote Peering - Connecting to the Core of the Internet
Understanding Remote Peering - Connecting to the Core of the Internet
William Norton
11 internet peering-playbook
11 internet peering-playbook
William Norton
Recommandé
13.1 internet exchange-point-playbook
13.1 internet exchange-point-playbook
William Norton
15.1 transition create-peering-strategy
15.1 transition create-peering-strategy
William Norton
05 the business-case-for-internet-peering
05 the business-case-for-internet-peering
William Norton
An overview explaining the reasons fo peering at Internet Exchange Points (IXPs), versus IP Transit, and the known benefits and uses of both approaches to a network blend. The presentation brings to light the decline in pricing of IP Transit and what this means for the financial benefits that peering used to offer and how remote peering (or virtual connectivity at Internet Exchanges) continues to alter this landscape. It also highlights how remote peering has changed the way network operators exchange traffic and made peering more accessible to smaller/medium sized companies and developing markets, by removing the initial barriers in terms of legal, billing and technical; simplifying the whole process of expanding a network. Developing markets are also discussed, such as the Middle East, and the peering paradigm of 'keeping local traffic local' Vs virtually/remotely connecting to Internet Exchanges and the issues with both. It touches on the shift in the industry and how Internet Exchanges and Data Centres are behaving more like networks and vice versa, explaining the new Central European Peering Hub project by LU-CIX - with IX Reach as the first carrier partner - whereby they encourage members to join major Internet Exchanges (DE-CIX, LINX, France-IX and AMS-IX) via their Internet Exchange platform.
Remote Internet Peering Vs IP Transit: A Shift in Internet Architecture
Remote Internet Peering Vs IP Transit: A Shift in Internet Architecture
Ruth Plater
13 the taxonomy-of-internet-data-centers
13 the taxonomy-of-internet-data-centers
William Norton
This brief discussion talk brings forth and supports the thesis that Internet Peering improves network security.
How Internet Peering Improves Security
How Internet Peering Improves Security
William Norton
Understanding Remote Peering – The New Wave of Interconnection at the Core of the Internet. Using real-world case studies, this free webinar explains remote peering and what it means to ISPs, content providers and the global Internet peering ecosystem. Learn from William B. Norton who has presented three popular USTelecom webinars on Internet peering. Background The Internet peering ecosystem is going through a historic and rapid paradigm shift. The largest ISPs and content providers have always interconnected their networks at the core of the Internet using a technique called "Internet peering," the free and reciprocal exchange of access to each other's customers. In this way, networks of scale can exchange a large enough amount of traffic for free with one another to offset the cost of deployment (equipment, colocation, and transport to the colocation center). This justification is the basis for the business case for peering. However, a recent trend -- called "remote peering" -- has emerged as a way to get these peering benefits but without the cost of additional equipment, transport, or colocation. The remote peering model is where a remote peering provider delivers transport to the customer router with Virtual Local Area Network (VLAN) extension(s) from the largest exchange points in the world. In this way, the customer gets all of the benefits of peering (performance, control over routing, direct relationships with the peer networks, etc.) without the large initial capital and operational costs. This is not just a fringe or small change to peering - it is a fundamental shift in the Internet architecture. Remote peering is a new technique that helps make peering accessible to a much larger population. As a result of the cost shift, an increasing percentage of networks are peering across great distances. The peering paradigm of "peering keeps local traffic local" is no more. During the free webinar you will hear case studies from the field where medium-sized content companies are able to enter the peering ecosystem and connect to multiple Internet Exchange Points over a single circuit. These companies have graciously allowed their cost numbers to be shared so the traditional peering model can be compared against the emerging remote peering model. Also, the webinar will highlight the strongest arguments on both sides of the debate over whether remote peering is good or bad for the global Internet peering ecosystem. William B. Norton, Executive Director, DrPeering International and Author of the new 2014 Edition of “The Internet Peering Playbook: Connecting to the Core of the Internet” which includes a new chapter dedicated to remote peering.
Understanding Remote Peering - Connecting to the Core of the Internet
Understanding Remote Peering - Connecting to the Core of the Internet
William Norton
11 internet peering-playbook
11 internet peering-playbook
William Norton
IX Best Practices by Tay Chee Yong
IX Best Practices by Tay Chee Yong
IX Best Practices by Tay Chee Yong
MyNOG
Presented at ISOC's Serbian Open Exchange – IXP Workshop, December 4-5, 2013
SIX and some best practices for running an IXP
SIX and some best practices for running an IXP
matjazsi
IXP Gaurab SANOG
Gaurab Ixp Tutorial
Gaurab Ixp Tutorial
Tariq Mustafa
National Internet Exchange of India's Corporate Presentation
National Internet Exchange of India's Corporate Presentation
Mohit Chhabra
A presentation made at APNIC 38 during the ISOC-AU Meeting.
Internet Exchange Points, by Philip Smith [APNIC 38 / ISOC-AU]
Internet Exchange Points, by Philip Smith [APNIC 38 / ISOC-AU]
APNIC
10 the 21st-century-internet-peering-ecosystem
10 the 21st-century-internet-peering-ecosystem
William Norton
04 internet peering
04 internet peering
William Norton
14 the folly-of-peering-ratios
14 the folly-of-peering-ratios
William Norton
an overview of various considerations relative to IP peering
Peering in an IP World - Technology Requirements (3-nov, 2009)
Peering in an IP World - Technology Requirements (3-nov, 2009)
steve ulrich
EEDC course project
Rise of Network Virtualization
Rise of Network Virtualization
Arinto Murdopo
Presentation given by Stephen Wilcox, CEO of IX Reach at PTC'14, entitled “The Role IXPs and Peering Play in the Evolution of the Internet”. Excerpt: "There are over 400 Internet Exchange Points distributed across the world, and growing. The largest and most successful reside in Europe and play a vital role in the growth and evolution of the Internet. There are over 50 IXPs in Europe alone, most promoting local traffic exchange but only a handful recognised as international hubs for interconnections. These particular IXPs continue to increase their value added services and expand globally - most recently to the US - promoting their non-for-profit and neutral business models in varying and emerging markets. This recent expansion makes it all the more important to consider the role IXPs and peering play in the continuing evolution of the Internet and how network operators should approach peering in a network blend. The reciprocal interplay between Tier 1, 2 and 3 networks over IXPs, particularly those with an international focus, has become an interesting addition to the global Internet topology, enabling networks to reduce their costs and the Internet to grow in-line with end-user demand for high-bandwidth content and mobile usage. However, given 99.5% of peering agreements are completed on a hand shake, and the majority are settlement-free, scenarios such as de-peering can still occur, leading to partial Internet black-outs and events such as these need to be taken into consideration when building redundancy into a network. This industry briefing will discuss the most common ways different networks value and utilise IXPs in their network blend, what to consider when choosing peering locations, why some participate at an IXP while others do not, and the de-peering scenarios that can occur and the impact this can have on a network's service. It will also touch on the geographical positioning of major IXPs and the trends in peering partners by selected countries."
PTC'14 Presentation by Steve Wilcox: “The Role IXPs and Peering Play in the E...
PTC'14 Presentation by Steve Wilcox: “The Role IXPs and Peering Play in the E...
Nicole White
Access Power Peering
Access Power Peering
William Norton
09 the global-internet-peering-ecosystem
09 the global-internet-peering-ecosystem
William Norton
Route Server service @ NaMeX
Route Server service @ NaMeX
Route Server service @ NaMeX
Flavio Luciani
NaMeX overview @ Topix (TOrino Piemonte Internet eXchange) technical committee
NaMeX overview @ Topix technical committee
NaMeX overview @ Topix technical committee
Flavio Luciani
Mr Marcus Wiko Consult Peering Qos Price and Quality
Mr Marcus Wiko Consult Peering Qos Price and Quality
IDATE DigiWorld
A talk from RIPE NCC Regional Meeting in Dubrovnik, 2011 This presentation is a from a second part of Running an IXP Workshop. See http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/regional-meetings/dubrovnik-2011/workshops-and-tutorials for full programme.
Starting and running an IXP
Starting and running an IXP
matjazsi
The Internet backbone consists of just over 6000 independent networks that exchange traffic in fashions that are not well understood outside of the backbone networking community. We explain how it works, how it has evolved and how it is continuing to evolve today. This is a revised and annotated version of material most recently given as an invited presentation at OFC 2014, the optical fiber conference in San Francisco, in March 2014. To provide higher resolution, I've also uploaded a version w/o annotations, i.e. just the graphics.
Internet peering, with annotations
Internet peering, with annotations
Brough Turner
IT organizations around the world are transforming data center operations and economics by virtualizing their networks. Much like server virtualization decoupled VMs from the underlying X86 server hardware transforming the operational model of compute, network virtualization decouples software-based virtual networks from the underlying network hardware to enable a new operational model for networking. Deployed non-disruptively on any existing network without change, network virtualization transforms the physical network into a pool of capacity that can be consumed and repurposed on demand. You will learn how, today, companies like AT&T, NTT, eBay and Rackspace have transformed their operational model and reduced network provisioning time from days/weeks to seconds. You will learn how network virtualization, OpenStack cloud management and Chef automation can be leveraged together and examine the architectural decisions you should be considering now to prepare for this transformation
SDN, Network Virtualization and the Software Defined Data Center – Brad Hedlund
SDN, Network Virtualization and the Software Defined Data Center – Brad Hedlund
Chef Software, Inc.
Ixp strategy (updated)
Ixp strategy (updated)
Sophia Fan
10.1.break
10.1.break
William Norton
08 the 20th-century-internet-peering-ecosystem
08 the 20th-century-internet-peering-ecosystem
William Norton
Contenu connexe
En vedette
IX Best Practices by Tay Chee Yong
IX Best Practices by Tay Chee Yong
IX Best Practices by Tay Chee Yong
MyNOG
Presented at ISOC's Serbian Open Exchange – IXP Workshop, December 4-5, 2013
SIX and some best practices for running an IXP
SIX and some best practices for running an IXP
matjazsi
IXP Gaurab SANOG
Gaurab Ixp Tutorial
Gaurab Ixp Tutorial
Tariq Mustafa
National Internet Exchange of India's Corporate Presentation
National Internet Exchange of India's Corporate Presentation
Mohit Chhabra
A presentation made at APNIC 38 during the ISOC-AU Meeting.
Internet Exchange Points, by Philip Smith [APNIC 38 / ISOC-AU]
Internet Exchange Points, by Philip Smith [APNIC 38 / ISOC-AU]
APNIC
10 the 21st-century-internet-peering-ecosystem
10 the 21st-century-internet-peering-ecosystem
William Norton
04 internet peering
04 internet peering
William Norton
14 the folly-of-peering-ratios
14 the folly-of-peering-ratios
William Norton
an overview of various considerations relative to IP peering
Peering in an IP World - Technology Requirements (3-nov, 2009)
Peering in an IP World - Technology Requirements (3-nov, 2009)
steve ulrich
EEDC course project
Rise of Network Virtualization
Rise of Network Virtualization
Arinto Murdopo
Presentation given by Stephen Wilcox, CEO of IX Reach at PTC'14, entitled “The Role IXPs and Peering Play in the Evolution of the Internet”. Excerpt: "There are over 400 Internet Exchange Points distributed across the world, and growing. The largest and most successful reside in Europe and play a vital role in the growth and evolution of the Internet. There are over 50 IXPs in Europe alone, most promoting local traffic exchange but only a handful recognised as international hubs for interconnections. These particular IXPs continue to increase their value added services and expand globally - most recently to the US - promoting their non-for-profit and neutral business models in varying and emerging markets. This recent expansion makes it all the more important to consider the role IXPs and peering play in the continuing evolution of the Internet and how network operators should approach peering in a network blend. The reciprocal interplay between Tier 1, 2 and 3 networks over IXPs, particularly those with an international focus, has become an interesting addition to the global Internet topology, enabling networks to reduce their costs and the Internet to grow in-line with end-user demand for high-bandwidth content and mobile usage. However, given 99.5% of peering agreements are completed on a hand shake, and the majority are settlement-free, scenarios such as de-peering can still occur, leading to partial Internet black-outs and events such as these need to be taken into consideration when building redundancy into a network. This industry briefing will discuss the most common ways different networks value and utilise IXPs in their network blend, what to consider when choosing peering locations, why some participate at an IXP while others do not, and the de-peering scenarios that can occur and the impact this can have on a network's service. It will also touch on the geographical positioning of major IXPs and the trends in peering partners by selected countries."
PTC'14 Presentation by Steve Wilcox: “The Role IXPs and Peering Play in the E...
PTC'14 Presentation by Steve Wilcox: “The Role IXPs and Peering Play in the E...
Nicole White
Access Power Peering
Access Power Peering
William Norton
09 the global-internet-peering-ecosystem
09 the global-internet-peering-ecosystem
William Norton
Route Server service @ NaMeX
Route Server service @ NaMeX
Route Server service @ NaMeX
Flavio Luciani
NaMeX overview @ Topix (TOrino Piemonte Internet eXchange) technical committee
NaMeX overview @ Topix technical committee
NaMeX overview @ Topix technical committee
Flavio Luciani
Mr Marcus Wiko Consult Peering Qos Price and Quality
Mr Marcus Wiko Consult Peering Qos Price and Quality
IDATE DigiWorld
A talk from RIPE NCC Regional Meeting in Dubrovnik, 2011 This presentation is a from a second part of Running an IXP Workshop. See http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/regional-meetings/dubrovnik-2011/workshops-and-tutorials for full programme.
Starting and running an IXP
Starting and running an IXP
matjazsi
The Internet backbone consists of just over 6000 independent networks that exchange traffic in fashions that are not well understood outside of the backbone networking community. We explain how it works, how it has evolved and how it is continuing to evolve today. This is a revised and annotated version of material most recently given as an invited presentation at OFC 2014, the optical fiber conference in San Francisco, in March 2014. To provide higher resolution, I've also uploaded a version w/o annotations, i.e. just the graphics.
Internet peering, with annotations
Internet peering, with annotations
Brough Turner
IT organizations around the world are transforming data center operations and economics by virtualizing their networks. Much like server virtualization decoupled VMs from the underlying X86 server hardware transforming the operational model of compute, network virtualization decouples software-based virtual networks from the underlying network hardware to enable a new operational model for networking. Deployed non-disruptively on any existing network without change, network virtualization transforms the physical network into a pool of capacity that can be consumed and repurposed on demand. You will learn how, today, companies like AT&T, NTT, eBay and Rackspace have transformed their operational model and reduced network provisioning time from days/weeks to seconds. You will learn how network virtualization, OpenStack cloud management and Chef automation can be leveraged together and examine the architectural decisions you should be considering now to prepare for this transformation
SDN, Network Virtualization and the Software Defined Data Center – Brad Hedlund
SDN, Network Virtualization and the Software Defined Data Center – Brad Hedlund
Chef Software, Inc.
Ixp strategy (updated)
Ixp strategy (updated)
Sophia Fan
En vedette
(20)
IX Best Practices by Tay Chee Yong
IX Best Practices by Tay Chee Yong
SIX and some best practices for running an IXP
SIX and some best practices for running an IXP
Gaurab Ixp Tutorial
Gaurab Ixp Tutorial
National Internet Exchange of India's Corporate Presentation
National Internet Exchange of India's Corporate Presentation
Internet Exchange Points, by Philip Smith [APNIC 38 / ISOC-AU]
Internet Exchange Points, by Philip Smith [APNIC 38 / ISOC-AU]
10 the 21st-century-internet-peering-ecosystem
10 the 21st-century-internet-peering-ecosystem
04 internet peering
04 internet peering
14 the folly-of-peering-ratios
14 the folly-of-peering-ratios
Peering in an IP World - Technology Requirements (3-nov, 2009)
Peering in an IP World - Technology Requirements (3-nov, 2009)
Rise of Network Virtualization
Rise of Network Virtualization
PTC'14 Presentation by Steve Wilcox: “The Role IXPs and Peering Play in the E...
PTC'14 Presentation by Steve Wilcox: “The Role IXPs and Peering Play in the E...
Access Power Peering
Access Power Peering
09 the global-internet-peering-ecosystem
09 the global-internet-peering-ecosystem
Route Server service @ NaMeX
Route Server service @ NaMeX
NaMeX overview @ Topix technical committee
NaMeX overview @ Topix technical committee
Mr Marcus Wiko Consult Peering Qos Price and Quality
Mr Marcus Wiko Consult Peering Qos Price and Quality
Starting and running an IXP
Starting and running an IXP
Internet peering, with annotations
Internet peering, with annotations
SDN, Network Virtualization and the Software Defined Data Center – Brad Hedlund
SDN, Network Virtualization and the Software Defined Data Center – Brad Hedlund
Ixp strategy (updated)
Ixp strategy (updated)
Plus de William Norton
10.1.break
10.1.break
William Norton
08 the 20th-century-internet-peering-ecosystem
08 the 20th-century-internet-peering-ecosystem
William Norton
7.2 day 2 agenda opening
7.2 day 2 agenda opening
William Norton
07.1.1 application
07.1.1 application
William Norton
07.1 break client specific application decks
07.1 break client specific application decks
William Norton
07 public vs-private-peering-debate
07 public vs-private-peering-debate
William Norton
06 selecting an-ixp
06 selecting an-ixp
William Norton
04c.1.break
04c.1.break
William Norton
04a peering simulation-game
04a peering simulation-game
William Norton
03.1.break
03.1.break
William Norton
03 internet transit-playbook
03 internet transit-playbook
William Norton
02 internet transit
02 internet transit
William Norton
01 internet peering-workshop-agenda
01 internet peering-workshop-agenda
William Norton
16 peering policies
16 peering policies
William Norton
This file provides the details on the book discount for the attendees on the Jan 18, 2012 webinar on Internet Peering.
Book bundle details email note
Book bundle details email note
William Norton
This is the slide deck for the webinar I did Jan 18, 2012 for US Telecom. I talk about connecting to the edge of the Internet by purchasing Internet Transit, connecting to the Core of the Internet by peering and the business case for peering.
V4 connecting to the core of the internet
V4 connecting to the core of the internet
William Norton
Plus de William Norton
(16)
10.1.break
10.1.break
08 the 20th-century-internet-peering-ecosystem
08 the 20th-century-internet-peering-ecosystem
7.2 day 2 agenda opening
7.2 day 2 agenda opening
07.1.1 application
07.1.1 application
07.1 break client specific application decks
07.1 break client specific application decks
07 public vs-private-peering-debate
07 public vs-private-peering-debate
06 selecting an-ixp
06 selecting an-ixp
04c.1.break
04c.1.break
04a peering simulation-game
04a peering simulation-game
03.1.break
03.1.break
03 internet transit-playbook
03 internet transit-playbook
02 internet transit
02 internet transit
01 internet peering-workshop-agenda
01 internet peering-workshop-agenda
16 peering policies
16 peering policies
Book bundle details email note
Book bundle details email note
V4 connecting to the core of the internet
V4 connecting to the core of the internet
12.1 lunch break
1.
The Internet Peering
Workshop BREAK
Télécharger maintenant