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hidden72

join:2008-01-21
Kaysville, UT

reply to bogey780

Re: There done for.

If you take a simplistic approach, the backbone is any part of the network that carries more than 1 user's traffic. In a DSL network, that delineation occurs at the DSLAM. The link from the RT to my house is just my own traffic, hardly considered a backbone. However, the link from the RT to the CO carries hundreds of user's traffic back to the CO. That is a backbone link.

If you want to play the game of semantics, we could use proper terms such as backbone, core, distribution, aggregation, edge, etc, but for the purposes of this conversation the copper "backbone" that feeds the remote terminals is a bottleneck that needs to go away.

bogey780

join:2004-03-19
Here
kudos:1

»en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backhaul_%···tions%29

»en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backbone_network

There's a succinct difference between the terms. I wouldn't call RT to the CO a backbone as there's a very significant heirarchy difference between the two.

And getting back to the original assertion, Qwest and AT&T are running fiber for backhaul. That's the whole point.


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