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Global Crossing's fiber optic network covers more than 100,000
route miles worldwide.
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Global Crossing was
founded in 1997, and now boasts a customer base that includes more
than 35 percent of Fortune 500 companies, as well as over 700 carriers,
mobile operators and ISPs.
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The company's global network was designed for the convergence of voice,
video and data, and delivers services to the top commercial centers around
the planet.
In January of 2002, Global Crossing filed
for bankruptcy protection. The company emerged from bankruptcy just
under two years later, in December of 2003at the time, company CEO
John Legere said, "Global Crossing today emerges with an unmatched asset:
an IP-based network reaching more than 500 major commercial centers around
the world."
Global Crossing's IP-based MPLS fiber optic network now covers more
than 100,000 route miles, reaching six continents, 60 countries and more
than 600 major cities. The company's single AS Number ensures the maximum
possible routing efficiency in the network.
The network supports access speeds from E1/T1 to STM-16/OC-48/GiG-E
and reaches 100 percent of the Internet, carrying over 120 GB of Internet
traffic:
- Over 160 GB of peering capacity
- Over 170 private peering interconnections
- Nine public peering interfaces
The company's IP Services include a range of connection, service and
billing options. Fast provisioning is a key focus of the network, requiring
15 days to provision most Internet access ports, Private Lines or IP VPN
services.
VoIP
is now a key feature of Global Crossing's portfolio. The company's VoIP
Services support multiple CODECs, access options, signaling protocols
and new voice offerings. Global Crossing currently carries over 2 billion
VoIP minutes per month.
Global Crossing's uCommand online
account management portal allows clients to manage services through real-time
access to the company's service delivery and customer assurance platforms.
IP Transit Specifications:
- OC-48/STM-16 and OC-192/STM-64 directly deployed utilizing dense
wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM)
- Full-pipe, tiered and burstable service options
- T1/E1 to Gigabit-per-second (Gbps) speeds
- Resilient and self-healing bi-directional network architecture
- Global deployment of MPLS-te (Multi-Protocol Label Switchingtraffic
engineering) on the IP backbone provides maximum traffic management
capabilities and a more reliable network
- Fully redundant hubs with multiple data paths, multiple power supplies
and redundant power feeds
- IP Network backbone engineered to 50 percent of capacity to enable
complete failover to alternate paths
- Tiered service option provides rapid upward scalability while sustaining
cost control; burstable service option provides scalable bandwidth "on-demand"
- Fully optical network enables additional capacity to be lit as needed
to meet growing customer demands
Corporate Contact Info:
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