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Moving your School to Gigabit

Moving your School to Gigabit. Why schools are doing it, and how they did it. Agenda. Bandwidtth & Gigabit Ethernet Top 5 reasons why schools move to Gigabit Typical Primary School scenarios Questions you should be asking. Bandwidth. Analogy 1: Pipes and Water. Bandwidth.

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Moving your School to Gigabit

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  1. Moving your School to Gigabit Why schools are doing it, and how they did it.

  2. Agenda • Bandwidtth & Gigabit Ethernet • Top 5 reasons why schools move to Gigabit • Typical Primary School scenarios • Questions you should be asking

  3. Bandwidth Analogy 1: Pipes and Water

  4. Bandwidth Analogy 2: Lanes and cars

  5. How bandwidth is measured • Bandwidth is the measure of how many bits of information can flow from one place to another in a given amount of time. • Although bandwidth can be described in bits per second (bps), a larger unit of measurement is generally used. • Network bandwidth is typically described as… • Thousands of bits per second (kbps), • Millions of bits per second (Mbps), • Billions of bits per second (Gbps), and • Trillions of bits per second (Tbps).

  6. Top 5 reasons Schools go Gigabit. • Go faster. Save time. • Schools already have the infrastructure. • Your curriculum demands it. • Better control. • Cheaper than you think.

  7. Reason 1: Go faster. Save Time. • 10 x faster. • In theory … in practice, it depends on your network. But you will see significant improvements, especially as the number of PCs on your network grows. • Reduce bottlenecks - especially servers. • Improves the speeds of everyday tasks. • Copying files from servers, especially larger files. • Lab logins/logouts • Accessing databases from servers … but unfortunately not Oasis :( • “Ghost” faster. • Imaging the hard disks on your PCs. • Performance improves with increased numbers of PCs. The benefit to you: Spend less time waiting for things to happen, and more time making them happen.

  8. Reason 2: Existing infrastructure • You have the cabling in place • Cat 5e/Cat 6 copper cabling, or optical fibre, is capable of Gigabit speeds --> no need to re-cable. • Your servers are Gigabit-ready. • Gigabit Network Interface Cards (NICs) are in most servers. • If not, you can add a Gigabit NIC for < $100. • New T-4-L computers come with Gigabit NICs. • New PCs you will receive on the 2005 T4L rollout all come Gigabit ready. The benefit to you: Save money by using your existing infrastructure.

  9. Reason 3: Your curriculum • Digital multimedia places more pressure on network performance. • Large digital audio, digital video, and PowerPoint files all require faster network speeds to move efficiently around your network. • Gigabit Ethernet is ready for the “digital curriculum”, now and into the future. • “Future-proofing” your network for larger files, larger applications, web-based learning, and more network traffic. The benefit to you: Your network provides fast access to 21st century learning tools.

  10. Reason 4: More control • Make your network “smarter”. • New Gigabit switches offer functionality that helps you better manage your network. • Monitor your network performance and quickly identify and isolate problems. • Make sure your Gigabit switches are Managed • Better manage “Ghosting” and other multicasting functions like audio and video streaming. The benefit to you:Your network is more reliable, flexible and available when you need it.

  11. Reason 5: Cheaper than you think Cost per port now very close to 10/100 Ethernet Number of installations dramatically increased Source: IDC Corp, 2004.

  12. Typical Primary School Scenarios

  13. Typical Primary School Scenarios

  14. Typical Primary School Scenarios

  15. Typical Primary School Scenarios

  16. Typical Primary School Scenarios Link Aggregation

  17. Typical Primary School Scenarios Gigabit Links to Servers

  18. Typical Primary School Scenarios

  19. Typical Primary School Scenarios

  20. Typical Primary School Scenarios

  21. Typical Primary School Scenarios

  22. Questions you should be asking • Is my cabling ready? • Fibre, Category 5e and Category 6 copper. • Some newer installations of Cat 5 cabling will support Gigabit Ethernet. • What equipment can I reuse? • GBICs, 10/100 switches with Gbit uplink ports, media converters. • What switches are recommended by the DET? • Only two vendors are recommended across ALL CATEGORIES of network switches: Allied Telesyn & HP. • What kind of warranty should I get? • Expect lifetime warranty with advance next-day replacement. • Where can I get help and advice? • DET Technology Advisors & ITD networks Group • Trusted Systems Integrators or experienced resellers • Allied Telesyn Professional Services • And the big one … $$$???

  23. Q & A • Levi Sutherland - Systems Engineer • levi_sutherland@alliedtelesyn.com.au • Greg Basford - Education Sales • greg_basford@alliedtelesyn.com.au

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