ROCHESTER, N.H. - Enterasys Networks this week will revamp the 10 Gigabit Ethernet support in its switches to help customers link high-density wiring closet devices to backbone switches and let companies more easily deploy high-speed links over metropolitan or campus-area networks where strands of fiber are scarce.
The modules, for Enterasys' X-Pedition ER-16 and Matrix E1 switches, come almost 18 months after Enterasys announced its entry in the 10 Gigabit market with a prestandard Matrix E1 switch, the industry's first 10 Gigabit box.
Since then, the lagging standards process and lack of demand have slowed the company's 10 Gigabit push.
The company also has had to deal with a leadership shakeup and a massive re-examination of its accounting practices after an investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission earlier this year.
Enterasys added a one-port 10 Gigabit Ethernet module to its X-Pedition ER-16, a 16-slot Layer 2 to Layer 4 modular switch.
The chassis now can support up to 128 Gigabit Ethernet ports, seven 10 Gigabit Ethernet ports, and modules for FDDI, Packet over SONET, and high-density 10/100M bit connections.
The 10 Gigabit products bring X-Pedition up to speed with competing products such as Cisco's Catalyst 6500, Foundry Networks' BigIron, Extreme Networks' BlackDiamond, Hewlett-Packard's 9300m and Alcatel's OmniSwitch 8800.
Enterasys' Matrix E1 is a fixed-configured Ethernet switch with 12 Gigabit Ethernet ports and one 10 Gigabit Ethernet slot. The box, which was announced in mid-2001 and delivered last year, was previously available only with proprietary 10 Gigabit technology.
While industry watchers say mass 10 Gigabit adoption is a few years off, some corporate users would like to see it sooner than later.
"I could use [10 Gigabit Ethernet links] today" says Mike Cranmer, an assistant vice president of technical operations at IGN Variable Annuities in West Chester, Pa. "Currently, we are running single Gigabit uplinks [from the LAN edge to the core] and I have seen utilization hit 80% from time to time."
"A single 10 Gigabit uplink would give me the density and capacity I needed for the foreseeable future," he adds.
One reason for the long delay in delivery of Matrix E1 since it was announced almost 18 months ago was the holdup in the ratification of the 802.3ae standard by the IEEE. The standard was scheduled to be ratified last March but lingered until June. Another reason was market conditions.
"To be honest, we didn't see much of a market for 10 Gigabit Ethernet," last year, even while Cisco, Foundry and others all shipped prestandard 10G Ethernet gear in 2001, says Mark Pearce, product marketing manager for X-Pedition. "We saw no need to rush into it."
While the 10 Gigabit modules put Enterasys in the same arena with the rest of the 10 Gigabit players, the company says its product has the same shortcomings as many other competitors in that its 10 Gig blades can't deliver true 10G bit/sec performance on a single 803.3ae port.