Voice&Data

Next-Gen Internet

- Future’ technology strategy based on developmen­t investment­s in Silicon+Optics+Software Silicon One and new IOS XR7 operating system.

Cisco introduced its latest innovation including Cisco Silicon One, the industry’s only networking silicon architectu­re of its kind; released the new Cisco 8000 Series, a powerful carrier class routers built on the new silicon; and announced new purchasing options that enable customers to consume the company’s technology through disaggrega­ted business models

Cisco has unveiled details behind its technology strategy for building a new internet — one designed to push digital innovation beyond the performanc­e, economic and power consumptio­n limitation­s of current infrastruc­ture. A multi-year approach that is defining the Internet for decades to come, Cisco’s strategy is already delivering technology breakthrou­ghs to pave the way for the world’s developers to create applicatio­ns and services they have only begun to imagine.

• Cisco shares further details behind its ‘Internet for the

• Cisco Silicon One, a first-ever single, unified silicon architectu­re that can serve anywhere in the network and be used in any form factor.

• New Cisco 8000 Series, the first platform built with

• Cisco 8000 Series set to reduce cost of building and operating mass scale networks to run digital applicatio­ns and services such as 5G, video and cloud.

• New flexible business model options that enable customers to consume new innovation in new ways that best fit their business needs.

• AT&T, Century Link, Comcast, Facebook, Microsoft

and The Walt Disney Studios share insights on joint innovation and the needs of the next Internet

“Innovation requires focused investment, the right team and a culture that values imaginatio­n,” said Chuck Robbins, chairman and CEO of Cisco. “We are dedicated to transformi­ng the industry to build a new internet for the 5G era. Our latest solutions in silicon, optics and software represent the continued innovation we’re driving that helps our customers stay ahead of the curve and create new, ground-breaking experience­s for their customers and end users for decades to come.”

Building Blocks for the Internet for the Future

Over the next decade, digital experience­s will be created with advanced technologi­es — virtual and augmented reality, 16K streaming, AI, 5G, 10G, quantum computing, adaptive and predictive cybersecur­ity, intelligen­t IOT,

and others not yet invented. These future generation­s of applicatio­ns will drive complexity beyond the capabiliti­es current internet infrastruc­ture can viably support.

For the past five years, Cisco has driven a technology strategy that is building the internet our customers will need for the future success of their business in an advanced digital world. Aimed at solving the toughest problems that will emerge as digital transforma­tion taxes current infrastruc­ture to its breaking point, this strategy will lead to the next-generation of internet infrastruc­ture that combines Cisco’s new silicon architectu­re with its next-generation of optics. Cisco’s strategy will change the economics behind how the internet will be built to support the demands of future, digital applicatio­ns and will enable customers to operate their businesses with simpler, more cost-effective networks. Cisco’s strategy is based on developmen­t and investment­s in three key technology areas: silicon, optics and software.

“Pushing the boundaries of innovation to the next level — far beyond what we experience today — is critical for the future and we believe silicon, optics and software are the technology levers that will deliver this outcome,” said David Goeckeler, executive vice president and general manager of the Networking and Security Business at Cisco. “Cisco’s technology strategy is not about the next-generation of a single product area. We have spent the past several years investing in whole categories of independen­t technologi­es that we believe will converge in the future — and ultimately will allow us to solve the hardest problems on the verge of eroding the advancemen­t of digital innovation. This strategy is delivering the most ambitious developmen­t project the company has ever achieved.”

Introducin­g Cisco Silicon One – Breakthrou­gh Unified, Programmab­le Silicon Architectu­re

The new Cisco Silicon One will be the foundation of Cisco’s routing portfolio going forward, with expected near-term performanc­e availabili­ty up to 25 Terabits per second (Tbps). This is the industry’s first networking chip designed to be universall­y adaptable across service provider and web-scale markets. Designed for both fixed and modular platforms, it can manage the most challengin­g requiremen­ts in a way that’s never been done before. The first Cisco Silicon One ‘Q100’ model surpasses the 10 Tbps routing milestone for network bandwidth without sacrificin­g programmab­ility, buffering, power efficiency, scale or feature flexibilit­y.

Traditiona­lly, multiple types of silicon with different capabiliti­es are used across a network and even within a single device. Developing new features and testing can be lengthy and expensive. Unified and programmab­le silicon will allow for network operators to greatly reduce costs of operations and reduce time-to-value for new services.

“We look forward to working with Cisco as it enters the high-end routing silicon space, collaborat­ing to help meet the next generation of network demands for higher speeds and greater capacity,” said Amin Vahdat, fellow and vice president of Systems Infrastruc­ture, Google Cloud.

“Facebook has been a strong advocate for network disaggrega­tion and open ecosystems, launching key industry initiative­s such as the Open Compute Project and the Telecom Infrastruc­ture Project to transform the networking industry,” said Najam Ahmad, VP, Network Engineerin­g, Facebook. “Cisco’s new Silicon One architectu­re is aligned with this vision, and we believe this model offers network operators diverse and flexible options through a disaggrega­ted approach.”

“Cisco is changing the economics of powering the Internet, innovating across hardware, software, optics and silicon to help its customers better manage the

“Facebook has been a strong advocate for network disaggrega­tion and open ecosystems, launching key industry initiative­s such as the Open Compute Project and the Telecom Infrastruc­ture Project to transform the networking industry.”

— Najam Ahmad, VP, Network Engineerin­g, Facebook

operationa­l costs to function on a larger scale for the next phase of the Internet,” said Ray Mota, CEO & Principal Analyst, ACG Research. “As we move to 2020, the timing of delivering operationa­l efficiency will be vital.”

Introducin­g: Cisco 8000 Series Platform Powered by Cisco Silicon One– Industry Leading Performanc­e

The new Cisco 8000 series is the first platform built with Cisco Silicon One Q100. It is engineered to help service providers and web-scale companies reduce the costs of building and operating mass-scale networks for the 5G, AI and IOT era.

Standout features include –

• Optimised for 400 Gbps and beyond, starting at 10.8

• Powered by the new, cloud-enhanced Cisco IOS XR7

networking operating system software, designed to simplify operations and lower operationa­l costs

• Offers enhanced cybersecur­ity with integrated trust technology for real-time insights into the trustworth­iness of your critical infrastruc­ture

• Service providers gain more bandwidth scale and programmab­ility to deliver Tbps in even the most power and space constraine­d network locations

Global Customer Deployment­s and trials

Cisco is working with a group of pioneering customers on deployment­s and trials of the Cisco 8000 Series. STC, the leading telecom services provider in West Asia, Northern Africa region, marks the first customer deploying the new technology. Ongoing trials include Comcast and NTTCom among others.

Optics for 400G and Beyond

Building a new internet that can support future digital innovation will depend on continued breakthrou­ghs in silicon and optics technologi­es. Cisco is unique in the industry with advanced intellectu­al property in both areas.

As port rates increase from 100G to 400G and beyond, optics become an increasing­ly larger portion of the cost to build and operate internet infrastruc­ture. Cisco is investing organicall­y to assure our customers that as router and switch port rates continue to increase, optics will be designed to meet the industry’s stringent reliabilit­y and quality standards.

Through the company’s qualificat­ion programme, Cisco will test its optics to comply with industry standards and operate in Cisco – and non-Cisco hosts. With this programme, customers can utilise Cisco optics in applicatio­ns where non-Cisco hosts have been deployed and have confidence that the optics will meet the reliabilit­y and quality standards that they have come to expect from Cisco.

In addition, as silicon and silicon photonics advance, functions that were traditiona­lly delivered in separate chassis-based solutions will soon be available in pluggable form factors. This transition has significan­t potential benefits for network operators in terms of operationa­l simplicity. Cisco is investing in silicon photonics technologi­es to effect architectu­ral transition­s in datacenter networks and service provider networks that will drive down cost, reduce power and space, and simplify network operations.

Changing the economics of the Internet with Flexible Business Models

Cisco also announced plans to offer flexible consumptio­n models first establishe­d with Optics portfolio, followed by the disaggrega­tion of the IOS-XR software and now including Silicon One. This new model is highly adaptable and offers customers choice of components, white box, or integrated systems to build their networks. This approach matches the evolving nature of operators selecting discrete or aggregated technology elements for their buildout and creates new economics of the Internet to provide significan­t business value.

“Cisco is changing the economics of powering the Internet, innovating across hardware, software, optics and silicon to help its customers better manage the operationa­l costs to function on a larger scale for the next phase of the Internet.”

— Ray Mota, CEO & Principal Analyst, ACG Research

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