

Bandwidth in Little Rock, AR? 71
ioctl asks: "My company needs a 45Mb link from mid-town Little Rock, AR (University exit, I-630) to North Little Rock, AR (Wildwood exit, I-167). Our telco doesn't have any glass in the area, and wants about $800K over the next 5 years to build it out. We looked at another local provider who has the buildout already done, but their tech didn't show for the initial meeting (My boss: "He forgot it?!?!"). We've also looked into doing wireless via TCBY Tower (Proxim Tsunami or Aeras Networks Wavelink), but they are > $80K, plus rooftop space. Does bandwidth have to be this expensive? Are there any other possible solutions?"
Don't forget... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Don't forget... (Score:2, Insightful)
If after considering all the alternatives (VPN over DSL, mailing CDRs, etc) you decide you still need this fibre connection then... yes. Bandwidth is that expensive. Sorry!
Re:Don't forget... (Score:4, Funny)
Van Flips, Spills 350 Hard Disks Full of Porn
Cops Have A "Hard" Time Cleaning It Up
Re:Don't forget... (Score:1)
Re:Don't forget... (Score:3, Informative)
Another possibility (Score:4, Insightful)
A recommendation... (Score:1)
Is it me or... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Is it me or... (Score:5, Insightful)
No kidding. How big is this company if they can't afford an $80k investment in hardware? I'd snap that up at the drop of a hat since you'll have no per-month fees to pay to a telco. Obviously they're big enough to justify 45Mbps worth of bandwidth so I'd think $80k up front would be a drop in the hat.
Re:Is it me or... (Score:1)
Maybe we'll just have to wait until 2005 to do this, or go with wire-line service...
Re:Is it me or... (Score:4, Insightful)
And if US$ 80K seems stiff, maybe you can sell off chunks of your BW to other business to help make the mortgage payment on it.
With the prime lending rate at 4%, that $80K is a little under $270/month, probably a lot less than what you're paying for space and other utilities already.
Re:Is it me or... (Score:2, Interesting)
um... take another meeting with that local firm? (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh, and if you get on good terms with that company, let them know there's at least one network engineer laid off from an international Tier 1 provider living in Dallas, Texas, who talked you into giving him another chance and would looove to move in and replace that tech
Second that (Score:5, Insightful)
Giving folks a chance to make one mistake, unless you're in a situation where a particular mistake absolutely cannot happen is not a bad idea. It can't hurt (aside from a bit of the submitter's time) to bring the people in. He can always decide not to go with them. Given the amount of money on the line, it seems like worthwhile being gracious may be worthwhile.
Also, as others have pointed out, have you considered all possibilities? Do you really need a 45Mbps link? Can you get away with mirroring some fileservers on each side, or something along those lines? We don't really have any idea of what you're doing.
Just a thought -- It might also be worthwhile to hire a local network engineering consultant to give his advice as to what's best to do. He might know of worthwhile things that other local companies have done.
You might consider working a deal with any other businesses interested in doing the same thing and maybe even the city. If there are other businesses that desperately need network connectivity or could reduce their ISP fees by joining into such a thing, perhaps the people asking $800K could be made to give a better deal, or at least split costs.
If you decide to do rooftop links, remember that the failure conditions are different from lines. Depending upon the sort of system you decide upon, bad weather can negatively impact your link.
[Sigh] There's just so little information that it's hard to give more than very basic guesses as to what you want to do.
Re:Second that (Score:4, Informative)
We are trying to do multiple things:
- AD Replication (not much bandwidth)
- SQL Replication (average usage isn't much, but overnight processes generate multiple gigs of changes, and have to be done before 5am)
- File Replication (Big bandwidth; scanned documents & the like)
- Line-of-business Apps (Big SQL bandwidth; they aren't very efficient, but we didn't write them, so... =P )
- VOIP for 24 lines (1.5Mb or so max)
We also need to be able to grow pretty significantly over the next few years.
Something else is that the LR location will be moving within the next 2.5 years, and most local telco's won't touch a short lease for this much bandwidth...
Re:Second that (Score:2, Insightful)
I would recommend you move before investing in such a fat pipe to be honest. You've survived for awhile with how it is, so why not just suck it up and deal with it until your where you can play far more in advanced. Maybe even get it to that when they move the pipe is already there and waiting.
Re:Second that (Score:4, Insightful)
* I'm not familiar with AD usage, but perhaps you could get away with whatever lower-bandwidth connectivity *is* available (business DSL?) at both locations.
* VoIP -- May be able to get away with a dedicated business DSL line again. More a question for telco folks. Issuing cell phones may be an answer (and these have benefits of their own).
* SQL replication/File replication -- if there's any way to simply dump changes to a hard drive, this may be a good time to consider the van-full-of-CDs approach that someone suggested (or more likely, a USB 2 hard drive). Can you afford to have someone drive a hard drive across town each night for a maximum of 30 months? This has the added benefit of saving you on FedEx or whatever physical transport mechanism you use. With file replication, you may also consider use of a more advanced distributed filesystem like Coda that can lazily propagate data and use distributed servers.
* Line-of-business Apps: Not sure. Depends on what you can get away with. If you can't just mirror a DB -- one side really does do writes that the other side may need to read right away -- and you really do have serious read and write bandwidth usage on each side, then you may be stuck WRT a high-speed link.
You may need to squeeze your growth estimates, if you're going to move in the next 2.5 years, especially if it's more likely to happen in six months. You might also consider the networking issue as a factor in accelerating any move in progress.
Hire a network engineer (Score:1)
The first thing I would do is look into centralizing your applications and change the delivery methods. Why have these piggy SQL server calls traversing the network? If you can't get the frontend converted from SQL native to a web-based system, then at least consider going to terminal services for that app.
Re:Second that (Score:2, Informative)
Re:um... take another meeting with that local firm (Score:1, Insightful)
Do you really need 45Mbps? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Do you really need 45Mbps? (Score:2)
Hmmm.
I know there are a lot of Ts going into the Plaza west building not very far from there so this should be a very possible solution.
Re:Do you really need 45Mbps? (Score:1)
Uhm... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Uhm... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Uhm... (Score:3, Interesting)
No flaming or calling the original poster stupid. Gives a nice precise techinal answer without inflating himself.
Well done.
well (Score:5, Informative)
Re:well (Score:1)
Re:well (Score:1)
Re:well (Score:1)
consider moving the mountain to mohammed (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:consider moving the mountain to mohammed (Score:3, Funny)
At least the parts requiring that much bandwidth.
Re:consider moving the mountain to mohammed (Score:1)
Move (Score:2)
Paying outrageous fees or investing lots of money into oddball technology is retarded these days. You don't have to look hard to find industrial or commercial areas where high-speed telco access has already been installed by a local government or development authority, or where the state government will give you tax breaks or grants to install such equipment.
Universities operate tech parks as well, here's an exampl
Re:Move (Score:2)
Exactly, the city my business is located in, Burbank, CA, laid down something like 2,000 fibre optic lines throughout the commercial areas of the cit
Talk to the City and County (Score:3, Interesting)
You local Economic Development Commision might also be willing to help out. Tell them you are looking to move out of the Town, County, and maybe State. They might have grants and Tax incentives to help you.
Anything doing with computers is still considered high tech and usually clean. Planners love software development firms. Ask them for help to keep you there. That is what they get paid to do.
$80K for wireless? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:$80K for wireless? (Score:1)
Read RFC 1149.... (Score:4, Funny)
Quoting Buzz Lightyear: (Score:4, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Time Warner (Score:1)
802.15.3 won't work for us, because of the distance limitation. We have a minimum of 6.7 miles to cover in the longest hop.
Cogent (Score:2, Informative)
www.cogentco.com
100Mb for $1000/month
Full Fiber Network
Re:Cogent (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Cogent (Score:1)
Nuvox can help you out. Nuvox is a CLEC in LR (Score:4, Informative)
Re: Nuvox can help you out. Nuvox is a CLEC in LR (Score:1)
Re: Nuvox can help you out. Nuvox is a CLEC in LR (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re: Nuvox can help you out. Nuvox is a CLEC in LR (Score:1)
Re: Nuvox can help you out. Nuvox is a CLEC in LR (Score:1, Troll)
Re: Nuvox can help you out. Nuvox is a CLEC in LR (Score:1, Offtopic)
Good grief ACs if you are not worth you claiming then they are not worth reading.
Why? (and don't forget co-lo) (Score:2)
If you REALLY need that kind of bandwidth, take a long look at co-lo'ing your servers somewhere. You can get the bandwidth relativly cheeply, and house all the high bandwidth stuff at the co-lo. Then you just remotely manage it. Have some way to do send large batches of data to the colo (say large capacity tape drive, or maybe so
Re:Why? (and don't forget co-lo) (Score:2)
Damn -- talk about diversified! (Score:2)
I guess the frozen yogurt market has some stiff competition these days, eh?
$800K?! (Score:2)
Relocate (Score:1)
unused municipal "Dark fiber" (Score:2, Informative)
In some areas there may be fiber owned by the city/state/county that is not being used.
It might be possible to get the rights to some of that fiber if your company has any relationship with the local govt... If not, a good alternative might be to dedicate a vlan and ports on your switch to have for example a library located at each location interconnected. You essentially would be providing the backbone hardware for the library / local ci
Re:This *is* Arkansas, ya know. (Score:1)
I know from personal experiance working with such places where they have upgraded the infrastructure during the
For example... One city I know of required the cable company to place alot of fiber when they changed cable company providers {they were going to have to dig up the streets anyway so it was easier to do it once}. The fiber is owned by the city. They HAVE used a minute amount of it to connect the main library w/ city hall. T
Consider agregating it (Score:2)
As a side benefit, since your connectivity will be diverse, individual carrier and facility outages will only degrade your connection, not sever it.