Submarine Cable Landing Stations
Glimmerglass Intelligent Optical Systems improve network resiliency and reduce OPEX at submarine cable landing stations.
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The Challenge
Submarine fiber optic cables provide the vast majority of intercontinental network bandwidth. Most cables support hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of simultaneous voice calls and Internet traffic, due to the adoption of DWDM technology for transmission. Because of their importance to global networks, redundant fiberoptic paths have been deployed to lessen outages resulting from cable breaks and equipment failures.
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However, even with redundancy the time to repair is still unacceptably long and, due to booming traffic growth, the impact of a service outage is exponentially greater than it used to be. Because of this, maintaining service availability at the remote cable landing sites, where the undersea cables join the terrestrial network, is a prime concern.
The Solution
Glimmerglass systems provide a full non-blocking, transparent cross-connect that can rapidly and remotely reconfigure any optical path, regardless of wavelength. At a landing site, this connectivity permits optical layer connections between the wet side and dry side to be re-provisioned in milliseconds from the Network Operations Center with a few clicks of a mouse. These advantages enable submarine cable operators to improve network availability and reduce operational costs while, at the same time, create a network that is easier to manage and better positioned for future upgrades.
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Problem
AMS-IX needed to manage rapid traffic growth at its data centers while at the same time offer a high-bandwidth service for its customers.
Our Solution
Glimmerglass Intelligent Optical Systems enabled a dynamic optical layer that could make physical topology changes without disrupting customer traffic – the ideal solution for facilitating network upgrades and managing high-bandwidth customer traffic.
















