Looking from 100/400G toward Terabit networking line cards

June 6, 2013
Upcoming technical presentation will discuss how line cards aggregate bandwidths from 100 to 400 Gbps to 1 Terabit per second (Tbps) will need to evolve and rely heavily on high-speed serial interface technology

MoSys (NASDAQ: MOSY), a supplier of semiconductors for enabling fast, intelligent data access for network and communications systems, will be presenting at The Linley Group’s Linley Tech Carrier Conference 2013 in Santa Clara, CA. In his presentation, “Evolving Toward 1Tbps Line Cards,” MoSys’ VP of technology innovation and system applications, Michael Miller, will discuss how line cards that target aggregate bandwidths from 100 to 400 Gigabits per second (Gbps) to 1 Terabit per second (Tbps) will need to evolve and rely heavily on high-speed serial interface technology in order to achieve the necessary data throughput and packet header processing memory access rate.

See:400G : Why now?

The Linley Tech Carrier Conference is a two-day, single-track event delivering in-depth information from industry leaders focused on system design for wired and wireless infrastructure, including Carrier Ethernet, optical transport, broadband infrastructure and wireless base stations.The conference will open with a presentation from The Linley Group, highlighting carrier equipment design trends and providing context for later presentations. The remainder of the program will include subjects ranging from access designs to 100G Ethernet designs. Relevant chips discussed will include network processors (NPUs), FPGAs, wireless-baseband processors, control-plane processors, PHYs and optical-transport devices.

The Linley Tech Carrier Conference takes place June 12-13, 2013 at the Hyatt Regency Santa Clara. The conference is intended for system designers, carriers, network service providers, network equipment vendors, OEM/ODMs, press and the financial community. Attendance is free to qualified attendees who register by June 6, 2013.

More: Looking beyond 100G toward 400G standardization

Sponsored Recommendations

What you need to know about 6A cabling

Aug. 3, 2022
Did you know that Category 6A cable is the best choice for structured cabling?

Cat 6A Frequently Asked Questions

April 29, 2024
At CommScope we know about network change and the importance of getting it right. Conclusion Category 6A cabling and connectivity.

Cat 6A Hard Facts

Aug. 3, 2022
At CommScope we know about network change and the importance of getting it right. Conclusion Category 6A cabling and connectivity.

Why CommScope 6A?

Nov. 7, 2022
Inside buildings and across campuses, network demands and economics are changing. As applications like IoT, 10GBASE-T, multigigabit Wi-Fi 6/6E/7 and PoE++ become more common, ...