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MetanoiaInc Introduction
 
Metanoia, Inc. Introduction

Watch Introductory Video!

Metanoia, Inc. provides cutting-edge communication expertise. It was founded with the goal of helping to develop modular technical solutions for telecom equipment vendors and service providers.

Carrier Ethernet: Architectures and Design Best-Practices

"Carrier Ethernet" has been a much-bandied term in the past couple years, with heated debates (refer the signature debate at the MPLS World Congress in 2007, 2008, and 2009) on whether it supercedes or complements IP/MPLS technology. There are many nuances to this debate. First, "Carrier Ethernet" is a service, and can be realized using IP/MPLS technology. But, even if one restricts it to mean, carrier-class Ethernet (or Ethernet enhanced with carrier-class features of manageability, quality-of-service, survivability, and so on), the debate is not so simple -- the end-goal of a carrier (and, by extension, of a vendor) is to offer the best, most competitive services to its customers. So, the focus should really be on how to build a service that best satisfies customer needs.

Indeed, it turns out that there are seven distinct types of architectures an operator could choose from when planning a metro Ethernet deployment. Our goal in this webinar series will be to walk in-detail through each architectural option, explaining its design principles, how it works, and the tradeoffs involved in choosing that architecture. We will then outline canonical best-practices that we have found operators using today, through our analysis, research, and interactions with operators in North America, Europe and Asia. Finally, we will provide insights into where each of the technologies that play a role in building a "Carrier Ethernet" network (e.g. IP/MPLS, MPLS-TP/T-MPLS, PB/PBB/PBB-TE, PVT or combinations thereof) is headed from an evolution and standards perspective.

Definitely a seminar/workshop series that will provide deep critical insights, clear-up much confusion on the issue, shed light on key technical factors, and highlight practical issues that dictate operator choices. A must attend for those interested in understanding the network architectural implications of these technologies, and gaining a perception on emerging operator best-practices, and the motivations behind them.

To receive more information on this webinar series, please sign-up below.

IP Quality-of-Service: Techniques and What Operators/Vendors Need to Know

It would seem that after almost 20 years of work on Quality-of-Service, and at least a decade plus devoted to IP QoS in particular, this would be a well-understood subject, with very little left to discus. In fact ... nothing could be further from the truth!

As applications and services become diverse and increase in volume, and operators focus on network convergence, the need to intelligently provide different treatment to different traffic, while at the same time maximizing infrastructure utility by effectively using it has never been stronger. The QoS toolset available to do so (toghether with network planning and design) is an effective means to accomplish said goals. Yet, doing so is easier said than done! With a plethora of techniques and building blocks, and an alphabet soup of acronyms (RED, RIO, WRED, GPS, WFQ, WRR, WDRR, DRR, MDRR, CBQ, LLQ, SP, sr-TCM, tr-TCM, TBM, LBM, to name just a few!), plus the din of vendor announcements/pronouncements and claims, it has become extremely difficult for an operator to distill the essence of each QoS building block, and develop designs that can utilize the power of the techniques available. Indeed, even vendor personnel may have a hard time developing a birds eye-view of the techniques and how to compose them, and in separating reality from kool-aid. To do so, and truly utilize QoS requires a comprehensive understanding of key underlying principles governing each traffic management operation, appreciating it's placement in a switch/router and/or network, and having the insight to implementing the right QoS strategy in each segment of the network.

This seminar/workshop series will look at this issue in depth -- starting with a comprehensive examination of key techniques for QoS in packet-based networks (e.g. IP and Ethernet), their operation, purpose, and value. It will then look at Layer 3 and Layer 2 QoS strategies, and at the usage of these techniques in the access, metro, and core segments of service provider networks. Finally, we will look at some canonical service provider architectures for access, metro, and core segments, and disucss the application of QoS techniques in them by way of illustration.

The goal will be to give insights into which procedures are applicable to which network segment, why, and how, and to empower both service providers and vendors. Service providers by helping them to ask the right questions and better design their networks, and vendors by helping them to better design systems and/or more effectively articulate the value provided by their switches/routers. Definitely a seminar series worth attending if you deal with QoS on a regular basis (either in a vendor or a service-provider environment), wish to really nail the fundamentals, and undesrtand their application at the network level.

To receive more information on this webinar series, please sign-up below.

WiMAX QoS Architectures: What You Should Know About QoS in WiMAX Networks

WiMAX has been the subject of much speculation and euhporia, as a panacea for broadband access in a large part of the world that is without an adequate wired infrastructure. It is almost 3x cheaper to deploy a wireless base-station than it is to build a wired infrastructure to serve the same market, so the appeal of wireless in much of the developing world is natural (witness the blazing rate of mobile subscriber growth in both India and China in 2007-08, which together now boast a billion plus mobile subscribers today!). WiMAX tests and deployments have occured in Latin America, Eastern Europe, Russia, Middle East, Africa, India, Malaysia, Australia, and Korea, and in many parts of the world it continues to be a technology looked upon as a key part of a broadband wireless acess strategy.

WiMAX is, at its heart, one of the first truly packet-oriented wireless technologies, designed to carry diverse types of traffic efficiently, while ensuring that each traffic type can obtain its desired service quality in as efficient a manner as possible. However, achieving this is much more than just "following" the standards. This is because some of the key aspects of quality-of-service (e.g. scheduler design, scheduling algorithms, and their inter-relationships with the PHY layer) are left open in the standards, allowing for vendor and carrier differentiation. The vendor's challenge therefore is to decide what QoS aspects to build into their chips/systems, while the operator's challenge is to devise ways of using that capability most effectively.

Both of these require a through understanding of how QoS works in WiMAX (or, more generally, in broadband wireless access) networks. This includes appreciating some of the vagaries that come about due to the wireless nature of the link, which makes QoS that much more complex. What parameters to tune for example? What scheduler choices are optimal? How do they interact with the adaptive PHY layer, which is the bedrock of WiMAX systems? What settings are optimal from a throughput and revenue perspective? These are questions that are not easily answered without the right insights.

The goal of this webinar series will be to pull the covers off this less-discussed aspect of QoS. Not only will we discuss key aspects of QoS built into the standards, but we will also explain the "why" behind them, and the "how" of using them. We will focus on aspects that are not specified in the standards, and utilize our industry-knowledge and our own research to give the audience a good understanding of the issues in deploying QoS-capable WiMAX networks.

To receive more information on this webinar series, please sign-up below.

Please sign-up here to receive announcements for the dates, times, and schedules of the above webinar sets, and to receive detailed outlines of what each series will encompass.

2011 & 2012 Events  

Smart Monitoring & Performance Management for Operational Efficiency and Reduced TCO! , Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Delivered, Globally!

Chairman

Smart Monitoring & Performance Management for Operational Efficiency and Reduced TCO

 This carrier-focused panel is part of the industry initiative on Provider Network Health Assessment, spearheaded by Metanoia, Inc., which is detailed here, and that was launched in the Fall of 2011 after consultation and discussion with over several dozen industry leaders.

The activities organized under the aegis of this initiative were conceived, designed, planned, co-ordinated, and lead by Dr. Vishal Sharma of Metanoia, Inc., in cooperation with leaders and experts of the contributing companies.

This unique, international, on-line panel brings together over a dozen players from the carrier eco-system, including names like TELUS, TATA Communications, Twitter, Linked In, CTS Telecom, Cisco, ADVA, Opnet, InfoVista, Packet Design, Amartus, AOL, Juniper, and more to discuss and debate key issues in end-to-end performance management, which is a topic of considerable contemporary relevance to every carrier, big or small, all across the globe! With the very definition of what it means to be a "service provider" changing rapidly, streamlined management of the network's performance, and appropriate interactions with one's upstream and downstream providers, is a key to profitability in today's dynamic telecom environment.

The topics covered are outlined here, while the genesis of this panel is explained in the video here. Distilled insights from Roundtables between the panelists in the lead-up to the panel start here.


Carriers World Asia 2012 , March 28-29, 2012

Bangkok, Thailand

Advisor : Optimising Total Cost of Ownership in a Content-Centric World, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

This carrier-focused panel was designed to explore the relationship between the over-the-top or content providers of today and the traditional carrier or infrastructure provider. The aim was to first ask what the key elements are for a successful wholesale and retail telco business model, and then see how telco offerings need to be reassessed to match the opportunities in the content world, and ask how the telco could identify and fill the gaps in its business that did not capitalize on content.

Dr. Vishal Sharma of Metanoia, Inc. was invited to serve on the Advisory Committee of Carriers World Asia 2012, and worked closely with the organizers providing a number of insightful suggestions on the program and the conference outreach, plus valuable guidance that helped to shape the agenda of the conference, and the structure and format of the above panel.


MPLS & Ethernet World Congress 2012 , February 7-10, 2012

Marriot Hotel

Paris, France

Chairman: MPLS End-to-End: A Realistic Paradigm?, Thursday, February 09, 2012

This flagship Roundtable at the event was conceived, coordinated, and chaired by Dr. Vishal Sharma of Metanoia, Inc., which involved examining the applicability of MPLS in metro and access networks (in addition to the core, as has traditionally been the case), and asking how feasible that was, and under what circumstances was it doable. It involved a lively discussion between experts from all segments of the carrier eco-system, and included: Thomas Beckhaus, Deutche Telekom; Christoph Loibl, Silver Server; Xipeng Xiao, Huawei; George Swallow, Cisco; Hector Avalos, Ericsson; Yaakov J. Stein, RAD Data Communications; Zeev Draer, MRV; and Rajesh Kumar Sundararajan, Aricent.

An excellent brief on the Day 2 of the event, and on the panel by Tom Nadeau can be found here, while a video excerpt (with subtitles) of the panel can be found here (click on the video icon at the top of the post).

Complete video coverage of this Roundtable may be found (due to the tireless efforts of Vijee Djegaof Upperside; Thanks Vijee!) here: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4.


NANOG54 (North American Network Operators Group) Meeting , February 5-8, 2012

Westin Gaslamp Quarter

San Diego, CA

Chair/Moderator: Smart Management for Robust Carrier Network Health and Reduced TCO!, Tuesday, February 7, 2012

In this carrier-focused panel, we delved into the role that configuration management & audit plays in carrier network health assessment. This panel involved a mix of leading experts from the entire eco-system including: Jay Moran, Distinguished Engineer, AOL; Shawn Moriss, IP Development Manager, NTT America; Robert Bender, Chief Architect/Network Operations Manager, CTS Telecom, Bruce Katzel, VP Marketing, Amartus, and Colby Barth, Distinguished Engineer, Juniper.

In this panel, 3 operators of different reach/size (NTT America, AOL, & CTS Telecom) highlighted the techniques, approaches, and software they were using for config. management and audit. A system vendor (Juniper) discussed advances in the routers themselves to support efficient configuration, and a software vendor (Amartus) discussed the need to coordinate configurations across systems to offer a service (e.g. VPNs, ELANs, etc.). [So, elements such as having a CMDB (centralized management database), developing templates, training operational staff to automate routine tasks (thus freeing them to focus on advanced services), and having configuration backups were the focus here.]

The panel received excellent reviews from the NANOG54 audience, and can be seen here. A live video recordingof this panel can be found here.


India Telco (India Telecommunications Summit) , December 15-16, 2011

IIT Bombay

Mumbai, India

Chair/Moderator : Carrier Network Health, Tuesday, December 16, 2011

In this carrier-focused panel, we look at carrier network health assessement for two issues vital to operators in the region: power efficient equipment design, and network measurement. The panel involved a mix of experts from the carrier eco-system including: Pranesh Babu, CTO, Sify; Upendra Manyam, CTO Commtel Networks; Shamim Akhtar, Sr. Director Network Architecture & Technology, Comcast; Madhwesh Kulkarni, VP Carriers Services & Solutions, Aricent; and Ajay Ranjan Mishra, Global Head of Industry Environment, NSN.

An introduction to Carrier Network Health is here, while excerpts from the Panel are at: Part 1 and Part 2, respectively.


MEF 10th Anniversary Meeting,25-28 July 2011

Renaissance Stanford Hotel

905 California Street, Nob Hill

San Fransisco, CA 94108

Marketing & Technical Sessions: Dynamic Responsive Ethernet, Mobile Backhaul QoS

10th Anniversary Gala Dinner: Artesia Winery, Napa Valley


NANOG52 (North American Network Operators Group) Meeting , 11-15 June 2011

Sheraton Denver Downtown Hotel

1550 Court PlaceDenver, CO 80202

Chair/Moderator: Capacity Planning Panel, Wednesday, June 15, 2011

This carrier-centric panel focused on Capacity Planning in large service provieder networks. In particular, in representative networks of Qwest/CenturyLink and Verizon. The panelists were: Duke Fisher, Lead Engineer, Verizon, Thomas LundstromStaff Engineer, Qwest Communications, Arman Maghbouleh, President, Cariden Technologies, Dave Wang, President & Co-Founder, WANDL.

The panel involved excellent presentations by Tom Lundstrom (Qwest) and Duke Fisher (Verizon) on how they were using network planning and design tools to effectively handle large-scale design and network integration activities in their respective networks. This was followed by an interactive discussion on a number of aspects of capacity planning and design, and the state-of-the-art today on network design tools, and how operators are using them, where Arman Maghbouleh of Cariden, and Dave Wang, of WANDL, provided insightful perspectives on what is doable today, and what may be coming down the pike.

This panel received very good reviews from the NANOG audience (in addition to several in-person kudos!), and can be seen here (scroll down to Wednesday, to see the highlighted comments on the panel.) A live video recording of the panel is available here!


MPLS & Ethernet World Congress , 8-11 February, 2011

Hotel Sofitel Paris Forum Rive Gauche

17 Boulevard Saint Jacques

75014 Paris, France

Invited Chairman: Debate on MPLS-TP OAM and Use Cases

(Note: Dr. Vishal Sharma, of Metanoia, Inc. was not able to make this event due to a client schedule conflict, and the debate was chaired by another well-recognized and long-time MPLS/Ethernet expert, Carsten Rossenhoevel of EANTC instead.)