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Q&A: Cisco's Volpi muses on aging router's increasing edginess

By Jim Duffy , NetworkWorld.com , 12/01/2006
Mike Volpi

Cisco has a number of significant extensions to its venerable 7600 Ethernet edge router on tap next week at ITU. Among the more important is Broadband Remote Access Server (B-RAS), making the six-year-old workhorse Cisco’s strategic – for now – aggregation platform for video. Cisco Senior Vice President Mike Volpi shared his thoughts with Network World Managing Editor Jim Duffy on the ripened router, its ever increasing roles and its competition.

Your share of the edge router market improved for the third quarter in a row, according to Dell’Oro Group. Are you doing something right, or are your competitors doing something wrong?

The edge market is a broad market because there’s everything from Layer 2 pure connectivity to Layer 3 richer services, everything from consumers to business users, and so forth. I think what we’ve executed well on the Cisco side is to cover all of these market segments, which has been helpful for us; and then we’ve had now two or three software releases that run on the 7600 which have really, really improved the carrier-class nature of the platform. Everything from manageability, particularly around Ethernet, support for carrier features like high availability, like rapid restoration, like VPLS/HVPLS, EoMPLS. But the net net of it is that we’ve got a lot of good offerings. And then at a high level, the kind of message we’re trying to convey to our carrier customers is that even though you’re migrating to Ethernet, the battle is fought on a unified edge, meaning you have one platform that can deliver multiple services, which means a services-rich edge platform which the 7600 is, as opposed to a lot of our competitors who tend to just think of Ethernet as a transport technology and don’t have a lot of rich Layer 3 functionality on the platform. I think that’s contributed to our success.

It seems the 7600 is focused specifically at Ethernet while you have other platforms – the 10000 series and the 12000 series – for B-RAS and multiservice functions. Is the 7600 really a converged platform then?

It increasingly is. We’re taking the B-RAS functionality and have ported it to the 7600. We’ll be introducing that in the first calendar quarter next year. We’re introducing it at ITU. We will have session border controller functionality on the 7600, we will have deep packet inspection functionality on the 7600, we’ll introduce richer QoS than the platform already has. So what we see essentially happening is that there is a market out there which is either pure B-RAS or pure multiservice edge, but what’s happening is the migration towards Ethernet. The way we look at it is, we have a platform that is very strong on Ethernet and we’re increasingly adding capabilities to it which are higher-level services. The 7600 roadmap is very rich in those sort of broad ranges of new services and a lot of our customers are increasingly buying that roadmap along with, of course, the existing Ethernet functionality on it.

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Q&A: Cisco's Volpi muses on aging router's increasing edginessBy Anonymous on December 5, 2006, 12:25 amWait a minute... Didn't Volpi say just a few months ago that B-RAS belonged as a separate function and that the "edge" box should be focused on doing the "heavy...

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