Download - Socitm Mll 2009
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Network sharing initiatives:Benefits and barriers
Richard BrandonHead of StrategyMLL Telecom
www.mlltelecom.com
Who are MLL Telecom?
• Provider of Managed Telecoms Services
• Operating since 1992• Licensed Operator• Own UK-wide Radio Spectrum• 24x7 Network Operations Centre• Provide parts of the UK’s largest
networks
www.mlltelecom.com
What does MLL Telecom do?• Managed community networks
– Copper, Fibre, Wireless, Switching
• Wireless networks– point-to-point– point-to-multipoint
• WiMAX networks• Managed Routers/Switches
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Who do we do it for?Blue Light
Enterprise and Utilities
Education
HealthcareLocal
AuthoritiesTelecoms
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Networks critical to the shared services agenda
Network for the Community
Education, Digital inclusion, Healthcare, Economic development,
environment
Cost reduction
Shared platformFor processes, data and applications
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Who stands to benefit?• County, District and Borough Councils• Schools and Further Education• Healthcare• Police and emergency services• Local communities• Third sector (charity workers)• New and transforming businesses
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Education• Enables effective use of Learning Platforms
– Content and usage doubling every 18months – More personalised Learning– Students moving from consumers to collaborators
• Equal access for disadvantaged students• Enables multiple use of facilities e.g. for adult
education• Meeting BSF guidelines
On Broadband in schools:“… We've got evidence that shows that it is probably worth half a grade at GCSE difference, if you have access to (on-line) resources…”
Neil McLean, Executive director of Becta
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Environment
• Network consolidation reduces carbon impact
• Enables flexible working to reduce council employees’ business travel and commuting
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Digital Inclusion
• Platform for broadband in disadvantaged areas– Often those people who use most council services
• Platform to target broadband ‘notspots’– Local business stimulus – Develops rural IT-dependant businesses– Attracts and retains businesses, jobs and skills
“We need to ensure that EVERYONE has access to high speed Internet if we're all to compete on a "level playing field".
Federation of Small Businesses
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Care Closer to Home
• Connect local people to deliver collaborative solutions– Social workers, health workers, security workers
• Platform for delivering care in the home
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Network Sharing – so where are we?
Network for the Community
Cost reduction
Shared platform
Now
1-3 Years
Source: Primary research amongst SOCITM members by MLL Telecom, October 2009
70.0%
22.5%
7.5%0.0%
10.0%
20.0%
30.0%
40.0%
50.0%
60.0%
70.0%
80.0%
90.0%
100.0%
Initiatives Under Way orPlanned
No plans
Network Sharing Initiatives
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What are the concerns?Main Barriers to Sharing Initiatives
77.0%
15.4%
0.0% 10.0% 20.0% 30.0% 40.0% 50.0% 60.0% 70.0% 80.0% 90.0%
Security Concerns
Fair use concerns
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What are people doing to help?
Network Supplier Proposals
15.0%
85.0%
Cost saving proposedCost savings not proposed
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Security and assurance concerns• Today restricted data usually sent over private
network• Shared networks can provide connectivity to GCSX
(Government Secure eXtranet) for sensitive data• Shared networks can prioritise traffic types
• However;• Any shared network solution MUST assure complete
privacy of restricted data from other community groups
• In state of emergency certain user groups MUST be given assured use of limited network capacity
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The shared network dilemma
Shared Community
Network
Low CostFlexible Trust
– Availability– Privacy – Security– Bandwidth assurance
Trus
t
Low cost
High flexibility
Private Networks
Public Networks
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Police
PoliceHealth
Council
Council
SchoolSchool
Health
• Low Cost• Flexible • Trust
– Availability– Privacy – Security– Bandwidth assurance
How to build a shared community network
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Each shared service needs its own connectivity
But what’s inside the cloud?
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Inside the reality of a public network
LE
LELE
Availability restricted by public service deployment
LECore capacity shared amongst unknown users
Traffic engineering under fault conditions impossible to predict
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Inside the reality of a private network
LE
LELE
Multiple fibres in common duct –single point of failure
Traffic ‘trombones’ in and out of core access links
Moving a core site is costly and complexLE
£ £ £ £
Multiple redundant fibres into same site
Multiple CPE ports
£££ £
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Inside a shared community network
LE LE
LELE
Less single points of failure
Optimum traffic routing
Flexible topology changes
Less fibres used can lower cost
Simpler CPE
£
Dedicated Switched
Core
£
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And benefit from customised design
LE LE
LELE
Optimise costs with microwave radio
Wireless for resilience or reach
Local Loop Unbundling lowers costs
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Delivering Security
LE LE
LELE
MPLS provides complete traffic separation between community user groups
Common Criteria Certified premise equipment encrypts restricted data for added security
GCSX
Map encrypted tunnels directly into MPLS to assure QoS
Secure Interconnect to GCSX
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Delivering Assurance• MPLS Traffic engineering can ‘reserve’ minimum bandwidth for a
class of user• All the bandwidth is available when there is no congestion• Profile can be changed under network fault conditions if desired• Multiple levels of QoS (Quality of Service) available per user – eg for
voice, video, client-server, browsing…
MPLS LSP 1
MPLS LSP 2
Encrypted
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Delivering Customised Benefits• Customised traffic prioritisation policy
– By application– By site– By user or groups of users
• Flexible Bandwidth• Option to integrate WiMAX and xDSL access• Multicast for video broadcast
– Staff briefings– News– Training and lessons– We recommend use of Next Gen Multicast VPN (NG-MVPN) proptocol within the core ) as it provides better integration with
MPLS than PIM (Protocol Independent Multicast)
• Direct Connections to other Govmnt Networks – JANET, GSCX…• Option to host content, applications, firewalls in core
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Delivering Availability
• House equipment in a secure exchange environment where possible– Redundant access circuit risk – Allows access for planned works out-of-
hours
• MPLS core– fast re-route– Simplified routing topology = more stable
network
• Use 24x7 proactive management
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Example – East Sussex County Council’s NGN
• 1Gbit resilient fibre core• 150 Schools connected by radio at 10-
100MBit/s• Other schools connected on fibre• Council offices ready to benefit from cost
advantage of existing community network
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Example - North West County Council • 9 site 1GBit/s resilient core• 180 Access sites connected at 100MBit/s
• 5 Year Pricing• BT Ethernet Circuits* - £6.111M• MLL Switched Core Network* - £5.021M• Saving of 18%
• And it’s more resilient, more flexible and lowers CPE costs
* Based on standard MLL Telecom pricing of BT circuits* Both designs subject to similar BT excess construction charges
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Example – East of England County Council
• 500 Schools connected at 10 - 40MBit/s• 150 Council offices connected at 100Mbit/s
• 5 Year Pricing• Initial Project Pricing £20M*• MLL Private Switched Network £15M*• Saving of 25%
* Both designs subject to similar BT excess construction charges
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Police
PoliceHealth
Council
Council
SchoolSchool
HealthTr
ust
Lower cost
Private Network
Public Network
Shared Community
Network
Shared Community Networks
•Low Cost•Flexibility•Trust
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Thank you
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