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LiveAir Networks: Regional Service Provider Innovating High-Quality, High-Speed Network Services to Rural Texas
技术
- 网络与连接 - 以太网
适用行业
- 电信
适用功能
- 物流运输
用例
- 公共交通管理
服务
- 系统集成
挑战
LiveAir Networks, a local wireless ISP launched in 2004 in Smithville, Texas, faced the challenge of providing high-quality internet connectivity to a sparsely populated area where it was too costly for major carriers to offer services. The company needed to scale its operations to deliver Gigabit Ethernet (GbE) access and bandwidth-intensive services, such as video and voice over IP. In 2012, LiveAir began building its 660-mile, monofiber, Dense Wave Division Multiplexing (DWDM) network—dubbed the TexasBone—that would allow the company to extend high-speed fiber optic services to rural homes. Since the TexasBone went live, LiveAir has experienced 300 to 400 megabits of new bandwidth demand every quarter. The company needed a cost-effective, easily manageable, and highly scalable network to deliver high-quality services at competitive prices.
关于客户
LiveAir Networks is a local wireless Internet Service Provider (ISP) that was launched in 2004 in Smithville, Texas. The company was established to provide high-quality internet connectivity to rural areas in Texas where it was too costly for major carriers to offer services. LiveAir Networks started with a single Point of Presence (POP) located next to a wireless tower with access to carrier fiber. As the company developed its wireless internet business, it realized the need to scale its operations to deliver Gigabit Ethernet (GbE) access and bandwidth-intensive services, such as video and voice over IP. In 2012, LiveAir began building its 660-mile, monofiber, Dense Wave Division Multiplexing (DWDM) network—dubbed the TexasBone—that would allow the company to extend high-speed fiber optic services to rural homes. Since the TexasBone went live, LiveAir has experienced 300 to 400 megabits of new bandwidth demand every quarter.
解决方案
LiveAir built its own infrastructure using deployment techniques that suited their business. They deployed small Point of Presence (POP) that can use commodity computing devices to move data. Each time they added a new POP to the network, they bought the lumber and supplies at the local hardware store, built it in their warehouse, and trucked it to the site. This approach allowed them to grow the network at a fraction of the typical construction costs and redirect more resources into the network. LiveAir's TexasBone network includes 10 POPs on a 660-mile ring around the state of Texas and serves 45,000 users. The microwave portion of the network includes 60 microwave POPs with high-capacity microwave rings between those, which all connect back to the Brocade fiber network. Inside of each TexasBone POP is a Brocade® MLXe-4 Series Core Router with a multiport 10 GbE interface module. The Brocade MLX Series Router helps LiveAir meet massive bandwidth demands, achieve greater network virtualization, and deliver small business cloud services using a smaller infrastructure than traditional carrier networks.
运营影响
数量效益
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