Spread Networks, a privately-owned telecommunications provider has launched a dark fiber private network specifically optimized for ultra-low latency for financial industry customers who communicate between Chicago and New York trading centers.
The TABB Group estimates that the $15 billion spent by financial firms on data centers in 2009 was largely driven by a need to reduce propagation delay by collating servers. But the Commodities Mercanile Exchange remains in Chicago, while trading partners do business in New York and London, as well as with dozens of other financial centers around the world.
That irreducible geographic fact means collocation can solve only some latency issues. Transmission networks must do some of the work as well. That explains why there has been a relative flurry of activity on the Chicago-New York route this year. A single kilometer of optical fiber path adds about five microseconds worth of latency to a connection. So it helps to have the shortest physical route between Chicago and New York.
Over time, the shortest path has dropped from roughly 1,000 fiber miles to 900 fiber miles, now to 825 miles.
In part, Spread Networks can offer unparalleled levels of latency performance because it has built a brand-new, direct route over the shortest possible route from New York to Chicago, 825 fiber miles long, reducing round-trip latency to 13.33 milliseconds. Up to this point, the lowest latency on the New York-Chicago route was about 15.9 milliseconds, according to Brian Quigley, ADVA Optical Networks senior director.
Where other low-latency connections between those cities uses railroad rights of way, Spread Networks has built along alternate routes, to shave distance, and hence delay. It’s just a guess, but if you want to follow the straightest-possible route between New York and Chicago, you’d follow U.S. Highway 80. That would allow a carrier to relatively easily negotiate rights of way agreements with a few entities and obviously allows easy trenching along the medians.
“Spread Networks has established the competitive standard for trading latency between these two important
financial centers,” said David Barksdale, CEO of Spread Networks (Barksdale was Netscape’s CEO) .
Spread Networks provides customers two strands of dark fiber, which are lit using optoelectronics provided by ADVA Optical Networks. Traffic is kept at layer one to avoid the additional latency if the traffic were carried at a higher level of the protocol stack.
The route terminates at 350 East Cermak Road in Chicago Illinois (telX) and 1400 Federal Blvd in Carteret, New Jersey (Lexent Metro Connect).
As part of the service, ADVA monitors the routes, providing real-time latency reporting. Repeater huts are spaced at 120 kilometers and the route uses low-noise optical amplifiers, dispersion compensation, cut-through switches and no protocol conversion or higher-level switching as part of the effort to achieve the lowest-possible latency performance.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Spread Networks Offers New "Lowest" Latency Route Between New York and Chicago
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Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
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