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- Network Working Group M. Vecchi
- Request for Comments: 1686 Time Warner Cable
- Category: Informational August 1994
-
-
- IPng Requirements: A Cable Television Industry Viewpoint
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo
- does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of
- this memo is unlimited.
-
- Abstract
-
- This document was submitted to the IETF IPng area in response to RFC
- 1550. Publication of this document does not imply acceptance by the
- IPng area of any ideas expressed within. The statements in this
- paper are intended as input to the technical discussions within IETF,
- and do not represent any endorsement or commitment on the part of the
- cable television industry or any of its companies. Comments should
- be submitted to the big-internet@munnari.oz.au mailing list.
-
- Table of Contents
-
- 1. Executive Summary .......................................... 2
- 2. Cable Television Industry Overview ......................... 2
- 3. Engineering Considerations ................................. 5
- 3.1 Scaling .................................................. 5
- 3.2 Timescale ................................................ 5
- 3.3 Transition and deployment ................................ 6
- 3.4 Security ................................................. 7
- 3.5 Configuration, administration and operation .............. 7
- 3.6 Mobile hosts ............................................. 8
- 3.7 Flows and resource reservation ........................... 8
- 3.8 Policy based routing ..................................... 10
- 3.9 Topological flexibility .................................. 10
- 3.10 Applicability ............................................ 10
- 3.11 Datagram service ......................................... 11
- 3.12 Accounting ............................................... 11
- 3.13 Support of communication media ........................... 12
- 3.14 Robustness and fault tolerance ........................... 12
- 3.15 Technology pull .......................................... 12
- 3.16 Action items ............................................. 13
- 4. Security Considerations .................................... 13
- 5. Conclusions ................................................ 13
- 6. Author's Address ........................................... 14
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- 1. Executive Summary
-
- This paper provides comments on topics related to the IPng
- requirements and selection criteria from a cable television industry
- viewpoint. The perspective taken is to position IPng as a potential
- internetworking technology to support the global requirements of the
- future integrated broadband networks that the cable industry is
- designing and deploying. The paper includes a section describing the
- cable television industry and outlining the network architectures to
- support the delivery of entertainment programming and interactive
- multimedia digital services, as well as telecommunication and data
- communication services.
-
- Cable networks touch on residences, in addition to campuses and
- business parks. Broadband applications will reach the average,
- computer-shy person. The applications will involve a heavy use of
- video and audio to provide communication, entertainment and
- information-access services. The deployment of these capabilities to
- the homes will represent tens of millions of users. Impact on the
- network and the IPng requirements that are discussed include issues
- of scalability, reliability and availability, support for real-time
- traffic, security and privacy, and operations and network
- management, among others.
-
- 2. Cable Television Industry Overview
-
- Cable television networks and the Internet are discovering each
- other. It looks like a great match for a number of reasons, the
- available bandwidth being the primary driver. Nonetheless, it seems
- that the impact of the cable television industry in the deployment of
- broadband networks and services is still not fully appreciated. This
- section will provide a quick (and simplified) overview of cable
- television networks, and explain the trends that are driving future
- network architectures and services.
-
- Cable television networks in the U.S. pass by approximately 90
- million homes, and have about 56 million subscribers, of a total of
- about 94 million homes (U.S. TV CENSUS figures, 9/30/93). There are
- more than 11,000 headends, and the cable TV industry has installed
- more than 1,000,000 network-miles. Installation of optical fiber
- proceeds at a brisk pace, the fiber plant in the U.S. going from
- 13,000 miles in 1991 to 23,000 miles in 1992. Construction spending
- by the cable industry in 1992 was estimated to be about $2.4 billion,
- of which $1.4 billion was for rebuilds and upgrades. Cable industry
- revenue from subscriber services in 1992 was estimated to be more
- than $21 billion, corresponding to an average subscriber rate of
- about $30 per month (source: Paul Kagan Associates, Inc.). These
- figures are based on "conventional" cable television services, and
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- are expected to grow as the cable industry moves into new interactive
- digital services and telecommunications.
-
- The cable industry's broadband integrated services network
- architecture is based on a hierarchical deployment of network
- elements interconnected by broadband fiber optics and coaxial cable
- links. In a very simplified manner, the following is a view of this
- architecture. Starting at the home, a coaxial cable tree-and-branch
- plant provides broadband two-way access to the network. The local
- access coaxial cable plant is aggregated at a fiber node, which marks
- the point in the network where fiber optics becomes the broadband
- transmission medium. Current deployment is for approximately 500
- homes passed by the coaxial cable plant for every fiber node, with
- variations (from as low as 100 to as many as 3000) that depend on the
- density of homes and the degree of penetration of broadband services.
- The multiple links from the fiber nodes reach the headend, which is
- where existing cable systems have installed equipment for
- origination, reception and distribution of television programming.
- The headends are in buildings that can accommodate weather protection
- and powering facilities, and hence represent the first natural place
- into the network where complex switching, routing and processing
- equipment can be conveniently located. Traffic from multiple headends
- can be routed over fiber optics to regional hub nodes deeper into the
- network, where capital-intensive functions can be shared in an
- efficient way.
-
- The cable networks are evolving quite rapidly to become effective
- two-way digital broadband networks. Cable networks will continue to
- be asymmetric, and they will continue to deliver analog video. But
- digital capabilities are being installed very aggressively and a
- significant upstream bandwidth is rapidly being activated. The
- deployment of optical fiber deeper into the network is making the
- shared coaxial plant more effective in carrying broadband traffic in
- both directions. For instance, with fiber nodes down to where only
- about 100 to 500 homes are passed by the coaxial drops (down from
- tens of thousands of homes passed in the past), an upstream bandwidth
- of several MHz represents a considerable capacity. The recent
- announcement by Continental Cablevision and PSI to provide Internet
- access services is but one example of the many uses that these two-
- way broadband capabilities can provide.
-
- The cable networks are also rapidly evolving into regional networks.
- The deployment of fiber optic trunking facilities (many based on
- SONET) will provide gigabit links that interconnect regional hub
- nodes in regional networks spanning multiple cable systems. These
- gigabit networks carry digitized video programming, but will also
- carry voice (telephone) traffic, and, of course, data traffic. There
- are instances in various parts of the country where these regional
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- networks have been in successful trials. And given that compressed
- digital video is the way to deliver future video programs (including
- interactive video, video on demand, and a whole menu of other
- applications like computer supported collaborative work, multiparty
- remote games, home shopping, customized advertisement, multimedia
- information services, etc.), one can be guaranteed that gigabit
- regional networks will be put in place at an accelerated pace.
-
- The cable networks are evolving to provide broadband networking
- capabilities in support of a complete suite of communication
- services. The Orlando network being built by Time Warner is an
- example of a Full Service Network(TM) that provides video, audio and
- data services to the homes. For the trial, ATM is brought to the
- homes at DS3 rates, and it is expected to go up to OC-3 rates when
- switch interfaces will be available. This trial in Orlando represents
- a peek into the way of future cable networks. The Full Service
- Network uses a "set-top" box in every home to provide the network
- interface. This "set-top" box, in addition to some specialized
- modules for video processing, is really a powerful computer in
- disguise, with a computational power comparable to high-end desktop
- workstations. The conventional analog cable video channels will be
- available, but a significant part of the network's RF bandwidth will
- be devoted to digital services. There are broadband ATM switches in
- the network (as well as 5E-type switches for telephony), and video
- servers that include all kinds of movies and information services. An
- important point to notice is that the architecture of future cable
- networks maps directly to the way networked computing has developed.
- General purpose hosts (i.e., the set-top boxes) are interconnected
- through a broadband network to other hosts and to servers.
-
- The deployment of the future broadband information superhighway will
- require architectures for both the network infrastructure and the
- service support environment that truly integrate the numerous
- applications that will be offered to the users. Applications will
- cover a very wide range of scenarios. Entertainment video delivery
- will evolve from the current core services of the cable industry to
- enhanced offerings like interactive video, near-video-on-demand and
- complete video-on-demand functions. Communication services will
- evolve from the current telephony and low-speed data to include
- interactive multimedia applications, information access services,
- distance learning, remote medical diagnostics and evaluations,
- computer supported collaborative work, multiparty remote games,
- electronic shopping, etc. In addition to the complexity and diversity
- of the applications, the future broadband information infrastructure
- will combine a number of different networks that will have to work in
- a coherent manner. Not only will the users be connected to different
- regional networks, but the sources of information - in the many forms
- that they will take - will also belong to different enterprises and
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- may be located in remote networks. It is important to realize from
- the start that the two most important attributes of the architecture
- for the future broadband information superhighway are integration and
- interoperability. The Internet community has important expertise and
- technology that could contribute to the definition and development of
- these future broadband networks.
-
- 3. Engineering Considerations
-
- The following comments represent expected requirements of future
- cable networks, based on the vision of an integrated broadband
- network that will support a complete suite of interactive video,
- voice and data services.
-
- 3.1 Scaling
-
- The current common wisdom is that IPng should be able to deal with
- 10 to the 12th nodes. Given that there are of the order of 10 to
- the 8th households in the US, we estimate a worldwide number of
- households of about 100 times as many, giving a total of about 10
- to the 10th global households. This number represents about 1
- percent of the 10 to the 12th nodes, which indicates that there
- should be enough space left for business, educational, research,
- government, military and other nodes connected to the future
- Internet.
-
- One should be cautious, however, not to underestimate the
- possibility of multiple addresses that will be used at each node
- to specify different devices, processes, services, etc. For
- instance, it is very likely that more than one address will be
- used at each household for different devices such as the
- entertainment system (i.e., interactive multimedia "next
- generation" television(s)), the data system (i.e., the home
- personal computer(s)), and other new terminal devices that will
- emerge in the future (such as networked games, PDAs, etc.).
- Finally, the administration of the address space is of importance.
- If there are large blocks of assigned but unused addresses, the
- total number of available addresses will be effectively reduced
- from the 10 to the 12th nodes that have been originally
- considered.
-
- 3.2 Timescale
-
- The cable industry is already making significant investments in
- plant upgrades, and the current estimates for the commercial
- deployment indicate that by the year 1998 tens of millions of
- homes will be served by interactive and integrated cable networks
- and services. This implies that during 1994 various trials will be
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- conducted and evaluated, and the choices of technologies and
- products will be well under way by the year 1995. That is to say,
- critical investment and technological decisions by many of the
- cable operators, and their partners, will be made over the next 12
- to 24 months.
-
- These time estimates are tentative, of course, and subject to
- variations depending on economic, technical and public policy
- factors. Nonetheless, the definition of the IPng capabilities and
- the availability of implementations should not be delayed beyond
- the next year, in order to meet the period during which many of
- the early technological choices for the future deployment of cable
- networks and services will be made. The full development and
- deployment of IPng will be, of course, a long period that will be
- projected beyond the next year. Availability of early
- implementations will allow experimentation in trials to validate
- IPng choices and to provide early buy-in from the developers of
- networking products that will support the planned roll out.
-
- It is my opinion that the effective support for high quality video
- and audio streams is one of the critical capabilities that should
- be demonstrated by IPng in order to capture the attention of
- network operators and information providers of interactive
- broadband services (e.g., cable television industry and partners).
- The currently accepted view is that IP is a great networking
- environment for the control side of an interactive broadband
- system. It is a challenge for IPng to demonstrate that it can be
- effective in transporting the broadband video and audio data
- streams, in addition to providing the networking support for the
- distributed control system.
-
- 3.3 Transition and deployment
-
- The transition from the current version to IPng has to consider
- two aspects: support for existing applications and availability of
- new capabilities. The delivery of digital video and audio programs
- requires the capability to do broadcasting and selective
- multicasting efficiently. The interactive applications that the
- future cable networks will provide will be based on multimedia
- information streams that will have real-time constraints. That is
- to say, both the end-to-end delays and the jitter associated with
- the delivery across the network have to be bound. In addition, the
- commercial nature of these large private investments will require
- enhanced network capabilities for routing choices, resource
- allocation, quality of service controls, security, privacy, etc.
- Network management will be an increasingly important issue in the
- future. The extent to which the current IP fails to provide the
- needed capabilities will provide additional incentive for the
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- transition to occur, since there will be no choice but to use IPng
- in future applications.
-
- It is very important, however, to maintain backwards compatibility
- with the current IP. There is the obvious argument that the
- installed technological base developed around IP cannot be
- neglected under any reasonable evolution scenario. But in
- addition, one has to keep in mind that a global Internet will be
- composed of many interconnected heterogeneous networks, and that
- not all subnetworks, or user communities, will provide the full
- suite of interactive multimedia services. Interworking between
- IPng and IP will have to continue for a very long time in the
- future.
-
- 3.4 Security
-
- The security needed in future networks falls into two general
- categories: protection of the users and protection of the network
- resources. The users of the future global Internet will include
- many communities that will likely expect a higher level of
- security than is currently available. These users include
- business, government, research, military, as well as private
- subscribers. The protection of the users' privacy is likely to
- become a hot issue as new commercial services are rolled out. The
- possibility of illicitly monitoring traffic patterns by looking at
- the headers in IPng packets, for instance, could be disturbing to
- most users that subscribe to new information and entertainment
- services.
-
- The network operators and the information providers will also
- expect effective protection of their resources. One would expect
- that most of the security will be dealt at higher levels than
- IPng, but some issues might have to be considered in defining IPng
- as well. One issue relates, again, to the possibility of illicitly
- monitoring addresses and traffic patterns by looking at the IPng
- packet headers. Another issue of importance will be the capability
- of effective network management under the presence of benign or
- malicious bugs, especially if both source routing and resource
- reservation functionality is made available.
-
- 3.5 Configuration, administration and operation
-
- The operations of these future integrated broadband networks will
- indeed become more difficult, and not only because the networks
- themselves will be larger and more complex, but also because of
- the number and diversity of applications running on or through the
- networks. It is expected that most of the issues that need to be
- addressed for effective operations support systems will belong to
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- higher layers than IPng, but some aspects should be considered
- when defining IPng.
-
- The area where IPng would have most impact would be in the
- interrelated issues of resource reservation, source routing and
- quality of service control. There will be tension to maintain high
- quality of service and low network resource usage simultaneously,
- especially if the users can specify preferred routes through the
- network. Useful capabilities at the IPng level would enable the
- network operator, or the user, to effectively monitor and direct
- traffic in order to meet quality and cost parameters. Similarly,
- it will be important to dynamically reconfigure the connectivity
- among end points or the location of specific processes (e.g., to
- support mobile computing terminals), and the design of IPng should
- either support, or at least not get in the way of, this
- capability. Under normal conditions, one would expect that
- resources for the new routing will be established before the old
- route is released in order to minimize service interruption. In
- cases where reconfiguration is in response to abnormal (i.e.,
- failure) conditions, then one would expect longer interruptions in
- the service, or even loss of service.
-
- The need to support heterogeneous multiple administrative domains
- will also have important implications on the available addressing
- schemes that IPng should support. It will be both a technical and
- a business issue to have effective means to address nodes,
- processes and users, as well as choosing schemes based on fair and
- open processes for allocation and administration of the address
- space.
-
- 3.6 Mobile hosts
-
- The proliferation of personal and mobile communication services is
- a well established trend by now. Similarly, mobile computing
- devices are being introduced to the market at an accelerated pace.
- It would not be wise to disregard the issue of host mobility when
- evaluating proposals for IPng. Mobility will have impact on
- network addressing and routing, adaptive resource reservation,
- security and privacy, among other issues.
-
- 3.7 Flows and resource reservation
-
- The largest fraction of the future broadband traffic will be due
- to real-time voice and video streams. It will be necessary to
- provide performance bounds for bandwidth, jitter, latency and loss
- parameters, as well as synchronization between media streams
- related by an application in a given session. In addition, there
- will be alternative network providers that will compete for the
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- users and that will provide connectivity to a given choice of many
- available service providers. There is no question that IPng, if it
- aims to be a general protocol useful for interactive multimedia
- applications, will need to support some form of resource
- reservation or flows.
-
- Two aspects are worth mentioning. First, the quality of service
- parameters are not known ahead of time, and hence the network will
- have to include flexible capabilities for defining these
- parameters. For instance, MPEG-II packetized video might have to
- be described differently than G.721 PCM packetized voice, although
- both data streams represent real-time traffic channels. In some
- cases, it might be appropriate to provide soft guarantees in the
- quality parameters, whereas in other cases hard guarantees might
- be required. The tradeoff between cost and quality could be an
- important capability of future IPng-based networks, but much work
- needs to be advanced on this.
-
- A second important issue related to resource reservations is the
- need to deal with broken or lost end-to-end state information. In
- traditional circuit-switched networks, a considerable effort is
- expended by the intelligence of the switching system to detect and
- recover resources that have been lost due to misallocation. Future
- IPng networks will provide resource reservation capabilities by
- distributing the state information of a given session in several
- nodes of the network. A significant effort will be needed to find
- effective methods to maintain consistency and recover from errors
- in such a distributed environment. For example, keep-alive
- messages to each node where a queuing policy change has been made
- to establish the flow could be a strategy to make sure that
- network resources do not remain stuck in some corrupted session
- state. One should be careful, however, to assume that complex
- distributed algorithms can be made robust by using time-outs. This
- is a problem that might require innovation beyond the reuse of
- existing solutions.
-
- It should be noted that some aspects of the requirements for
- recoverability are less stringent in this networking environment
- than in traditional distributed data processing systems. In most
- cases it is not needed (or even desirable) to recover the exact
- session state after failures, but only to guarantee that the
- system returns to some safe state. The goal would be to guarantee
- that no network resource is reserved that has not been correctly
- assigned to a valid session. The more stringent requirement of
- returning to old session state is not meaningful since the value
- of a session disappears, in most cases, as time progresses. One
- should keep in mind, however, that administrative and management
- state, such as usage measurement, is subject to the same
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- conventional requirements of recoverability that database systems
- currently offer.
-
- 3.8 Policy based routing
-
- In future broadband networks, there will be multiple network
- operators and information providers competing for customers and
- network traffic. An important capability of IPng will be to
- specify, at the source, the specific network for the traffic to
- follow. The users will be able to select specific networks that
- provide performance, feature or cost advantages. From the user's
- perspective, source routing is a feature that would enable a wider
- selection of network access options, enhancing their ability to
- obtain features, performance or cost advantages. From the network
- operator and service provider perspective, source routing would
- enable the offering of targeted bundled services that will cater
- to specific users and achieve some degree of customer lock-in. The
- information providers will be able to optimize the placement and
- distribution of their servers, based on either point-to-point
- streams or on multicasting to selected subgroups. The ability of
- IPng to dynamically specify the network routing would be an
- attractive feature that will facilitate the flexible offering of
- network services.
-
- 3.9 Topological flexibility
-
- It is hard to predict what the topology of the future Internet
- will be. The current model developed in response to a specific set
- of technological drivers, as well as an open administrative
- process reflecting the non-commercial nature of the sector. The
- future Internet will continue to integrate multiple administrative
- domains that will be deployed by a variety of network operators.
- It is likely that there will be more "gateway" nodes (at the
- headends or even at the fiber nodes, for instance) as local and
- regional broadband networks will provide connectivity for their
- users to the global Internet.
-
- 3.10 Applicability
-
- The future broadband networks that will be deployed, by both the
- cable industry and other companies, will integrate a diversity of
- applications. The strategies of the cable industry are to reach
- the homes, as well as schools, business, government and other
- campuses. The applications will focus on entertainment, remote
- education, telecommuting, medical, community services, news
- delivery and the whole spectrum of future information networking
- services. The traffic carried by the broadband networks will be
- dominated by real-time video and audio streams, even though there
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- will also be an important component of traffic associated with
- non-time-critical services such messaging, file transfers, remote
- computing, etc. The value of IPng will be measured as a general
- internetworking technology for all these classes of applications.
- The future market for IPng could be much wider and larger than the
- current market for IP, provided that the capabilities to support
- these diverse interactive multimedia applications are available.
-
- It is difficult to predict how pervasive the use of IPng and its
- related technologies might be in future broadband networks. There
- will be extensive deployment of distributed computing
- capabilities, both for the user applications and for the network
- management and operation support systems that will be required.
- This is the area where IPng could find a firm stronghold,
- especially as it can leverage on the extensive IP technology
- available. The extension of IPng to support video and audio real-
- time applications, with the required performance, quality and cost
- to be competitive, remains a question to be answered.
-
- 3.11 Datagram service
-
- The "best-effort", hop-by-hop paradigm of the existing IP service
- will have to be reexamined if IPng is to provide capabilities for
- resource reservation or flows. The datagram paradigm could still
- be the basic service provided by IPng for many applications, but
- careful thought should be given to the need to support real-time
- traffic with (soft and/or hard) quality of service requirements.
-
- 3.12 Accounting
-
- The ability to do accounting should be an important consideration
- in the selection of IPng. The future broadband networks will be
- commercially motivated, and measurement of resource usage by the
- various users will be required. The actual billing may or may not
- be based on session-by-session usage, and accounting will have
- many other useful purposes besides billing. The efficient
- operation of networks depends on maintaining availability and
- performance goals, including both on-line actions and long term
- planning and design. Accounting information will be important on
- both scores. On the other hand, the choice of providing accounting
- capabilities at the IPng level should be examined with a general
- criterion to introduce as little overhead as possible. Since
- fields for "to", "from" and time stamp will be available for any
- IPng choice, careful examination of what other parameters in IPng
- could be useful to both accounting and other network functions so
- as to keep IPng as lean as possible.
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- 3.13 Support of communication media
-
- The generality of IP should be carried over to IPng. It would not
- be an advantage to design a general internetworking technology
- that cannot be supported over as wide a class of communications
- media as possible. It is reasonable to expect that IPng will start
- with support over a few select transport technologies, and rely on
- the backwards compatibility with IP to work through a transition
- period. Ultimately, however, one would expect IPng to be carried
- over any available communications medium.
-
- 3.14 Robustness and fault tolerance
-
- Service availability, end-to-end and at expected performance
- levels, is the true measure of robustness and fault-tolerance. In
- this sense, IPng is but one piece of a complex puzzle. There are,
- however, some vulnerability aspects of IPng that could decrease
- robustness. One general class of bugs will be associated with the
- change itself, regardless of any possible enhancement in
- capabilities. The design, implementation and testing process will
- have to be managed very carefully. Networks and distributed
- systems are tricky. There are plenty of horror stories from the
- Internet community itself to make us cautious, not to mention the
- brief but dramatic outages over the last couple of years
- associated with relatively small software bugs in the control
- networks (i.e., CCS/SS7 signaling) of the telephone industry, both
- local and long distance.
-
- A second general class of bugs will be associated with the
- implementation of new capabilities. IPng will likely support a
- whole set of new functions, such as larger (multiple?) address
- space(s), source routing and flows, just to mention a few.
- Providing these new capabilities will require in most cases
- designing new distributed algorithms and testing implementation
- parameters very carefully. In addition, the future Internet will
- be even larger, have more diverse applications and have higher
- bandwidth. These are all factors that could have a multiplying
- effect on bugs that in the current network might be easily
- contained. The designers and implementers of IPng should be
- careful. It will be very important to provide the best possible
- transition process from IP to IPng. The need to maintain
- robustness and fault-tolerance is paramount.
-
- 3.15 Technology pull
-
- The strongest "technology pull" factors that will influence the
- Internet are the same that are dictating the accelerated pace of
- the cable, telephone and computer networking world. The following
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- is a partial list: higher network bandwidth, more powerful CPUs,
- larger and faster (static and dynamic) memory, improved signal
- processing and compression methods, advanced distributed computing
- technologies, open and extensible network operating systems, large
- distributed database management and directory systems, high
- performance and high capacity real-time servers, friendly
- graphical user interfaces, efficient application development
- environments. These technology developments, coupled with the
- current aggressive business strategies in our industry and
- favorable public policies, are powerful forces that will clearly
- have an impact on the evolution and acceptance of IPng. The
- current deployment strategies of the cable industry and their
- partners do not rely on the existence of commercial IPng
- capabilities, but the availability of new effective networking
- technology could become a unifying force to facilitate the
- interworking of networks and services.
-
- 3.16 Action items
-
- We have no suggestions at this time for changes to the
- directorate, working groups or others to support the concerns or
- gather more information needed for a decision. We remain available
- to provide input to the IPng process.
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- 4. Security Considerations
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- No comments on general security issues are provided, beyond the
- considerations presented in the previous subsection 3.4 on network
- security.
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- 5. Conclusions
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- The potential for IPng to provide a universal internetworking
- solution is a very attractive possibility, but there are many hurdles
- to be overcome. The general acceptance of IPng to support future
- broadband services will depend on more than the IPng itself. There is
- need for IPng to be backed by the whole suite of Internet technology
- that will support the future networks and applications. These
- technologies must include the adequate support for commercial
- operation of a global Internet that will be built, financed and
- administered by many different private and public organizations.
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- The Internet community has taken pride in following a nimble and
- efficient path in the development and deployment of network
- technology. And the Internet has been very successful up to now. The
- challenge is to show that the Internet model can be a preferred
- technical solution for the future. Broadband networks and services
- will become widely available in a relatively short future, and this
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- Vecchi [Page 13]
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- RFC 1686 A Cable Television Industry Viewpoint on IPng August 1994
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- puts the Internet community in a fast track race. The current process
- to define IPng can be seen as a test of the ability of the Internet
- to evolve from its initial development - very successful but also
- protected and limited in scope - to a general technology for the
- support of a commercially viable broadband marketplace. If the
- Internet model is to become the preferred general solution for
- broadband networking, the current IPng process seems to be a
- critical starting point.
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- 6. Author's Address
-
- Mario P. Vecchi
- Time Warner Cable,
- 160 Inverness Drive West
- Englewood, CO 80112
-
- Phone: (303) 799-5540
- Fax: (303) 799-5651
- EMail: mpvecchi@twcable.com
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- Vecchi [Page 14]
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