Post: Router that can download ENTIRE library of congress in 1 second
03-13-2010, 04:20 PM #1
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); Cisco made headlines today announcing a next generation router that will revolutionize the internet by increasing downloads to unheard of speeds. The Cisco press release makes the following claims about the CRS-3 router:

It enables the entire printed collection of the Library of Congress to be downloaded in just over one second; every man, woman and child in China to make a video call, simultaneously; and every motion picture ever created to be streamed in less than four minutes.

Tech Ticker interviewed Kelly Ahuja, Cisco Senior Vice President and General Manager Service Provider Routing Technology Group about the new product this afternoon. He answered all our questions but one: When will consumers be able to take advantage of this new high speed internet? Perhaps that's because that part of the equation is up to our internet service providers. Until they upgrade it might as well all be a dream.

Below is Kara Swisher's take on the new product.

Provided by All Things D, March 9, 2010:

Cisco today announced a new version of its key routing system, which the networking giant said has a dozen times the traffic capacity of competitors and three times as much as the company’s previous version.

Cisco’s CEO John Chambers said the CRS-3 Carrier Routing System is aimed at the huge growth in video on the Internet, a trend that has also caused slowdowns.

Pankaj Patel, SVP and GM for the service provider business, claimed the system could in just a few minutes deliver all the movies ever made or allow everyone in China to make a video phone call at once.

It had better. The consumption of video online is growing like crazy and a constant bottleneck is likely without some relief.

“Video brings the Internet to life,” said Chambers. “You are moving from a messaging platform to a video platform.”

Along with Chambers and Patel, AT&T (T) Labs CEO and President Keith Cambron was on the call discussing deployment trials the telecom giant has been doing with the CRS-3. CRS-3 (pictured here) will be available within the calendar year, said the Cisco execs on a press and analyst call this morning.

Cisco had said weeks ago that it was making “a significant announcement that will forever change the Internet and its impact on consumers, businesses and governments.”

Significant? We’ll see, of course. For sure, it was a highly hyped announcement by Chambers. But due to the speculation about what Cisco was unveiling, its stock hit a 52-week high yesterday. It dropped slightly this morning after the call.

Many others are getting into the high-speed act on the Web. Google (GOOG) said recently that it is planning on building a superfast broadband service. In addition, the Federal Communications Commission is set to unveil its own ambitious plan to improve high-speed Internet access across the United States.

Cisco has gotten deep into the video business of late, both in pushing its networking gear and in acquiring a video device maker like Pure Digital, the company behind my beloved Flip digital camera.

It is also working on innovative holographic and television-based home telepresence technologies.

You must login or register to view this content.
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});
03-13-2010, 04:30 PM #2
+tA.Daisho
Crumpets and tea?
Well thats all well and good, but the real question is the pirce tag of such an amzing router. Because lets face it I'm doubting not many people are gonna beable afford it.
03-13-2010, 04:45 PM #3
NP Carling26
Trolling is a art
My guess is something like this would be more for applications such as server farms or high tech companies and industries, not the end user. But, if it was applied to the mentioned above, it could significantly reduce our costs for those services, and also increase the speed at which we access those services. I don't expect to see it within a year or two, but within five years perhaps.
03-13-2010, 06:58 PM #4
Why So Serious?
Help Me Get My Nxt StaR*
Now that is sick.
03-23-2010, 03:57 AM #5
AntonioCro89
Level 1 Trustworthy-
Originally posted by marlon47
Hello friends

Cisco has announced a new routing system that they say is going to speed up the Internet in a big way. Dubbed the Cisco CRS-3, the company claimed that the new system – currently being tested by AT&T – is three times faster than its predecessor, which was introduced in 2004.
The company offers a few about the CRS-3 and what it enables:
The entire printed collection of the Library of Congress to be downloaded in just over one second
Every man, woman and child in China to make a video call, simultaneously
Every motion picture ever created to be streamed in less than four minutes.
Of course, that’s not for end users, but ultimately allows the telecom companies (Cisco’s customers) to route traffic around the Internet faster. Speaking to the reasoning behind the new speed push, Cisco CEO John Chambers says in the video below that he expects Internet traffic to grow at “200-500 percent per year” as bandwidth-intensive activities like downloading and streaming video continue to explode.
At the same time, Google has its own ideas for , and is currently looking to test its own fiber network to deliver 1 gigabit per second Internet connections (and Topeka, Kansas !). One way or another, it looks like the Internet is only going to continue to get faster.

Thanks for all friends

great copy and paste.: You must login or register to view this content.
03-23-2010, 08:32 PM #6
+tA.Daisho
Crumpets and tea?
Originally posted by AntonioCro89 View Post
great copy and paste.: You must login or register to view this content.


OMG he copied and pasted!!!
Like nearly 95% of everything else that crosses the forums on this site.
Quick everybody get your pitchforks and shotguns!!!
03-23-2010, 09:17 PM #7
lemonsdakidd7
Bounty hunter
You could download so much porn with that thing... ;p But seriously you would need a huge ass computer to deal with all that

Copyright © 2026, NextGenUpdate.
All Rights Reserved.

Gray NextGenUpdate Logo