OFC/NFOEC is presented by:

ComSoc

Non-financial Technical
Co-sponsor:

Short Courses

SC264 Optical Ethernet and Data Networking for Large Enterprises

Sunday, February 24, 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Jeffrey L. Cox; JP Morgan Chase, USA

Level: Beginner (No background or minimal training is necessary to understand course material)

Course Description
This course will begin by covering the history of Ethernet in the IEEE 802.3 standards and its evolution through present-day implementations. All major commercially successful variants will be reviewed at the physical layer including: coax (thin and thick-wire), twisted-pair, fiber (multi and single-mode), 10Mb, 100Mb, Gigabit and 10G. Discussions will include: media, topologies, framing, coding and media access control. The material will then introduce the data-link layer by covering learning bridges, spanning-tree, VLANs, trunking and flow-control. This information will be leveraged to illustrate how larger "switched" Ethernet networks are sometimes built. Issues related to scaling switched networks and "when to route" will be addressed ("Layer 2" vs. "Layer3" networks). Extending Ethernet beyond the LAN into metropolitan and long haul networks will be explored. Different transport, protection and restoration mechanisms will be examined including Ethernet over SONET, GFP, DWDM and "native" transport. Finally, we will cover techniques for building extremely large-scale Ethernet-based networks that integrate Layer 2 switching, Layer 3 routing, and optical transport.

Benefits and Learning Objectives
This course should enable you to:

Intended Audience
This course provides introductory level information on Ethernet technologies and their related protocols. Individuals attending this course must understand basic networking/computing terminology and concepts. The material will delve into the "bits and bytes" of Ethernet protocols and is aimed at anyone who wishes to understand Ethernet, how it works, and its applications. No prior knowledge of Ethernet is required.

Instructor Biography
Jeffrey L. Cox has accumulated more than 20 years of experience in designing, deploying and supporting large-scale enterprise and carrier data networks. From 1985 to 1992, he designed and supported a large multi-protocol network infrastructure at Texas A&M University. During the mid-1990s, he built Enterprise networks for various large corporations including Texas Instruments. He joined Level(3) Communications in 1998 and was responsible for the global Architecture of the company's MPLS backbone and other packet infrastructures. In 2000, he started Celion Networks, building optical DWDM transport equipment targeted at transporting Enterprise data traffic. He currently works at JP Morgan Chase as a vice president and network strategy principal architect.