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Scaling the 100 GbE Memory WallMichael Sporer, Director of IC Marketing, MoSys All interrelated system-level tradeoffs, including performance, pin count, and area, ultimately are driven by power consumption considerations. At 100 and 400 GbE, network chip vendors must consider end-to-end solutions for equipment OEMs. To remain competitive, OEMs plan to introduce multi-terabit systems that aggregate multiple 100 Gbit/s ports on each line card. Two current technology trends, 100 Gbit/s line speeds in network appliances and the transition to IPv6, compound design complexity. At both the network SOC and OEM appliance levels, solutions have to deliver performance, network management, and quality of service. Crucial parameters include absolute delay, delay jitter, minimum delivered bandwidth, and packet loss.[1] Network engineers monitor and manage networks based on these parameters, which also serve as the basis of contractual service-level agreements.
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