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Cisco Unveils its Carrier Routing System

In
a public event marking the 20th anniversary of its founding, Cisco
Systems unveiled its next generation CRS-1 Carrier Routing System, a
carrier-class, terabit-scalable, core routing platform aimed at large
service providers and research organizations. The Cisco CRS-1, which was
developed in-house over a period of four years and at cost of $500
million, leverages a series of hardware and software advances. Key among
these are:

John Chambers, Cisco’s president and CEO, said the CRS-1
Carrier Routing System is not an evolution of the company’s previous
platforms but a complete break from the past because it was designed
from scratch "to scale the Internet for the next 20 years." Chambers
stated that the new CRS-1 was built to bulk up in capacity during a long
lifetime deployment during which tremendous increases in traffic loads
would occur. Based on recent traffic trends in Japan, Chamber said he
expects Internet backbones to experience 400% to 500% growth over the
next few years as the number of broadband users growths and new
applications come online.

The Cisco CRS-1 is currently in field trials and is scheduled to be available in July
2004. The starting system list price is $450,000. Service providers
testing the CRS-1 include Sprint, MCI, NTT and Deutsche Telekom’s T-Com. http://www.cisco.com

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