width= Webcast: Migrating From Unix—Explore a World Of Great Alternatives.  October 25, 2006—Register now.

OpticallyNetworked.com   Earthweb  
Images Events Premium Services Media Kit Network Map E-mail Offers Vendor Solutions Webcasts
   subjects:
Search EarthWeb Network

internet.commerce
Be a Commerce Partner
Website Templates
Computer Memory
Tech Jobs
Laptop Computers
Inbound Calls
Online Degrees
CRM Software
Graphics Cards
Condos For Sale
IT Degrees
Web Hosting
GPS
Register Domain Name
Cheap Airline Tickets

Optically Networked : News: Cogent Scores With Gigex as Key Customer


Just click on the webcast of your choice to register:
Explore Business Intelligence Open Source Offerings
October 26, 2006--1:00pm EDT, 10:00am PDT
Join us and learn how the Business Objects XI platform embraces open source software (OSS) through its broad business intelligence (BI) offerings. Built on an open platform that can match disparate technologies environments deployed by application providers, Business Objects leads the BI industry by supporting OSS from Red Hat Linux and SuSE Linux operating systems, MySQL database and Eclipse IDE.
Register Now >
Transformation as an Enterprise Service
October 24, 2006--11:30am ET, 8:30am PT
Learn how to achieve interoperability between otherwise incompatible enterprise content management systems and transform legacy business functions to agile, SOA-enabled solutions. Register for this October 24th webcast, sponsored by Xenos.
Register Now >
Storage Strategies for Small Businesses
November 7, 2006--2 p.m. EST, 11 a.m. PST
When it comes to storage, small and medium businesses have a lot in common with large enterprises. Just like the Fortune 400, they need to ensure that data is backed up, retrievable and secure, and that data access complies with governmental regulations. Unfortunately, if you are a small business owner you also cope with some challenges the big guys don't have, budgets are small and your IT staff, if you even have one, may not have storage-specific expertise. Attend this webcast and learn storage strategies to meet your growing business demands.
Register Now >
Networking & Communications Glossary
directory service
honeynet
intranet
intrusion detection system
network appliance
NFS
port scanning
protocol
security
VPN
Search for more networking terms ...
 
FREE Tech Newsletters

Cogent Scores With Gigex as Key Customer
November 4, 2002
By Alex Goldman

P>Washington, D.C.-based Cogent Communications (Quote, Company Info) today announced a massive new customer, Gigex Inc. of San Francisco, Calif. Gigex provides trailers for movies and computer games to end users. With over 1 million downloads each month, many of them running to several or even a hundred megabits, Gigex is a major consumer of bandwidth.

Cogent is known as a metro Ethernet provider, but most people associate metro providers with office building connectivity. Cogent is usually lumped into a group that includes Telseon, Yipes!, and Intellispace.

With the announcement, along with its recent purchase of the U.S. assets of PSINet, it's clear that the company is branching out from buildings and moving into data centers.

"You can do almost anything if money is no object," said Dave Schaeffer, Cogent's CEO and founder, "but in today's economy that's unusual. We provide LAN throughput on a WAN scale through 200 data centers nationwide in 20 U.S. cities, 135 unique fiber rings, and 7,200 miles of metro fiber. What makes us unique is both the size of the connection we offer, and also the price point."

Of the 200 data centers that Cogent connects to, it runs only three. In the others, it competes with other major backbones. Gigex, for example, is located in a data center that Cogent does not own. Schaeffer claims that he was able to offer bandwidth to Gigex at a price that was between one-third and one-fifth the rates offered by the competition, without offering special discounts.

Service providers are often tempted to offer large bandwidth consumers a discount because of the structure of peering agreements. Peering agreements allow backbone providers to pass traffic to each other for free. However, the agreement only makes sense if the amount of traffic sent to a partner's network is about equal to the amount of traffic sent back in return. If traffic is not balanced, a larger backbone may cut off its rival. This briefly happened to PSINet. Shortly before its bankruptcy, PSINet briefly lost connectivity to Cable & Wireless' backbone.

Cogent is claiming that it does not need to offer discounts to attract large customers because its prices (100 Mbps for $1,000 per month) are already below the prices offered by the competition.

Cogent has built a high capacity network with $409 million in vendor financing from Cisco Systems (Quote, Company Info) plus venture capital and loan commitments. While its competitors continue to ask how it can offer the industry's lowest prices, the company continues to win customers.

This story originally appeared on internetnews.com.


News Archives

Accelerate your applications 15x with Citrix NetScaler
Join IT Research Panel and Get Paid: Influence the direction of IT research by taking brief online surveys. Join now!
Webcast: Achieve interoperability between incompatible enterprise content management systems.
Video: Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer Discusses a High-performance Business PC Solution.
Webcast: Migrating From Unix--Explore a World Of Great Alternatives


JupiterWeb networks:

internet.comearthweb.comDevx.comGraphics.com

Search JupiterWeb:

Jupitermedia Corporation has two divisions: Jupiterimages and JupiterWeb

Jupitermedia Corporate Info


Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints, & Permissions, Privacy Policy.

Web Hosting | Newsletters | Tech Jobs | Shopping | E-mail Offers