| DATA CENTER |
| Physical
Facilities |
Our state-of-the-art
Network Operations Center (NOC) is equipped with raised flooring, which allows for easily
cabling and reliable channeling of conditioned air to maintain a uniform room temperature.
The floors also help to reduce static and ensure a professional, computer grade
environment. The facility is equipped with Halon fire protection system which allows for
the immediate extinguishing of fire while equipment and personnel remain unharmed. The
command center is separated by automatic doors to further secure and protect the
equipment. |
Finally, the NOC itself
is located in a secure, monitored, class A building with only a minimum number of approved
personnel allowed to access the highly sensitive areas and equipment. A detailed record of
which employees have entered is kept on file as well as a record of all visitors. |
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| Power Systems |
Smooth, Clean, Redundant
Uninterruptible Power System To guard against local power failures, we have invested in
two separate industrial strength, three phase Liebert UPS systems. |
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These act as back-up batteries, maintaining
uninterrupted power in case of surges or power outages. In addition to these high-quality
power systems, the Internet Planners NOC is also equipped with a natural gas generator. With
these three backup systems in place, we can keep our network up and running indefinitely
without relying on the building's power. This is just another example of the commitment we
have to keeping our clients' sites up 24/7 no matter what situation arises. |
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| Temperature
Controlled |
Our facility has two
Liebert 10 ton industrial air conditioners, which condition our computer rooms and
operations center. Our computer room is kept at an optimal temperature of 65 degrees. |
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| Connected to 2 Backbones |
Our Network Operations
Center (NOC) located in Baltimore, Maryland, is OnNet with Frontier GlobalCenter (FGC) and
Qwest Communications through two separate bandwidth-on-demand connections which enter
Downtown Baltimore just a few floors below the NOC. |
FGC, a Tier 1 provider
whose 13,000-mile fiber optic network and Dense Wave Division Multiplexing (DWDM)
technology provide an enormous 460 gigabytes per second (Gbps) of capacity worldwide, has
an ATM fiber node located just a few floors below the Internet Planners NOC. |
Qwest comes into
Baltimore with an OC-12 line, and plans to upgrade their connection to an OC-48 in the
near future. They also have an ATM fiber node 14 floors below the Internet Planners NOC.
Qwest comes into Baltimore at the same location with an OC-12 line and plans to upgrade to
an OC-48. Our Qwest connection enables Internet Planners to offer additional redundancy
and better routes to Europe, Latin America, and Asia. With these two carriers, our router
will have up to 150,000 possible routes to send each packet of traffic. |
Furthermore, because of
these unique connections, Internet Planners no longer needs to link to the Internet though
an OC3 or T3 Telecom circuit. Instead, independent cables run inside our building directly
from the Internet Planners NOC to both the Global Center point of presence and the Qwest
point of presence. These lines can handle the bandwidth of a T3 or an OC3, and with DWDM
they can handle several times the bandwidth of an OC3. So whatever the client's bandwidth
needs are, Internet Planners has the scalability to meet them! |
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| Network
Redundancy |
Internet Planners uses
intelligent end-user routing software called Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), between Qwest
and FGC, who use it as well. BGP can identify which path is the most efficient for each
data packet, and then route the packet to its destination on the fastest path. This
increases the speed at which web pages sent from our NOC arrive at their destination. |
Studies have shown that
the second most common reason for downtime is circuit failure on the Tier 1 backbone, the
major data highway. To guard against this potential problem, we have two Tier-1 providers.
If one has problems, we can route traffic down the other one. Furthermore, because we are
OnNet with Frontier GlobalCenter and Qwest, we share their digital distribution
architecture, which includes private peering network connections to major Internet
carriers such as MCI, Sprint, UUNET, EUNET, AT&T, AOL, Best, Erols, @Home, IBM
Advantis and others. These private peering arrangements allow Internet Planner sto
exchange packets of data with every major backbone carrier in a one-to-one environment
quickly and efficiently. |
In addition, FGC has
high-speed links to 8 public exchanges including both MAE East and West and several NAPS.
Through these many public exchanges, customers have the ability to reach their site
wherever they are coming from on the Internet. Thus we have the best of both worlds: a
network that is both efficient and wide reaching. |
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| Network Reliability |
Industry analysis
reveals that 70 percent of downtime over 10 hours with any ISP is caused by telephone
circuit failure. Since our NOC is in the same building as Frontier Global Center, circuit
failure is virtually eliminated because there is no phone circuit between us and FGC.
Instead, there is a direct connection between our Cisco 7200 router and theirs. |
The second most common
reason for downtime is circuit failure on the Tier 1 backbone. FGC, themselves a backbone,
also have peer connections with other major Tier 1 providers, which allows traffic to be
switched to other backbones quickly in the event of a crisis. |
How reliable is this?
Yahoo is another fine company who connects directly using only FGC. If you can reach
Yahoo, you can reach our network. FGC's groundbreaking 460 Gbps network runs BGP to 25
other major carriers through private peering arrangements, providing the fastest, most
efficient and most reliable network available today. |
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