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GLOBECOM
2006
IEEE

On the Throughput-Cost Tradeoff of Multi-Tiered Optical Network Architectures

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On the Throughput-Cost Tradeoff of Multi-Tiered Optical Network Architectures
— In this work, we conduct a throughput-cost study of several optical network architectures: Optical Flow Switching (OFS), Tell-and-Go (TaG), Electronic Packet Switching (EPS), and Generalized MultiProtocol Label Switching (GMPLS). The simple, multi-tiered optical network that we consider comprises two groups of users, each in a distinct metropolitan-area network (MAN), which wish to communicate over a wide-area network (WAN). Our network cost model focuses on initial capital expenditure: transceiver, switching, routing, and amplification costs. Our results indicate that: OFS is the most scalable architecture of all, in that it is most cost-efficient when the average user data rate is high and the number of users in the network is large; EPS is most sensible when the product of the number of users and the average user data rate is low; the GMPLS architecture, which is conceptually intermediate to EPS and OFS, is optimal when the product of the number of users and the average user d...
Guy Weichenberg, Vincent W. S. Chan, Muriel M&eacu
Added 11 Jun 2010
Updated 11 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where GLOBECOM
Authors Guy Weichenberg, Vincent W. S. Chan, Muriel Médard
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