Featured Story
Ericsson rewrites sales pitch in face of slowing traffic growth
Ericsson substitutes value for volumes in its patter after recognizing a slowdown in traffic growth – but it still bets AI will have a massive impact on the network.
AT&T announced significant expansion of its network capacity in the Asia-Pac through participation in Asia-America Gateway consortium
December 4, 2009
HONG KONG -- AT&T* today announced a significant expansion of its network capacity in the Asia-Pacific region through its participation in the Asia-America Gateway (AAG) consortium. The consortium, focused on building an undersea cable system connecting Southeast Asia and the United States, earlier this month announced the completion of the 20,000 kilometer-long AAG submarine cable network’s comprehensive testing. This milestone now enables AAG to begin carrying commercial traffic.
The AAG submarine cable, a two-terabits-per-second fiber optic submarine cable network, is the first cable system to directly link Southeast Asia and the United States. The system provides much-needed diversity from traditional cable routes between Southeast Asia, Hawaii and mainland U.S. The cable’s more southerly routing will also provide more protection from the effects of natural disasters like earthquakes and tsunamis that have previously damaged submarine cable systems, resulting in disruptions to international Internet links.
The AAG cable connects at AT&T landing stations in Guam, Hawaii and Southern California and is designed to provide more direct connectivity to emerging markets in Asia via landing stations in the Philippines, Thailand, Brunei, Vietnam, Singapore, Malaysia and Hong Kong. The cable also provides seamless connectivity to Australia and India via common landing points along its route.
“As an initial party and the only U.S. carrier involved in the AAG consortium, we’re excited at the opportunity to offer our customers more capacity and route diversity in the Asia-Pacific region,” said Mary Anne Hicks, vice president, International Networking Engineering, AT&T. “AT&T carries more than 18 petabytes of IP and data traffic on an average business day, and this traffic continues to grow by leaps and bounds. Our participation in cable networks such as the AAG submarine cable network helps us to continually expand capacity for our customers’ growing global communications needs.”
AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T)
You May Also Like