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Case study - CopperTen - Syncroness chose ADC KRONE

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Tiêu đề Case Study - Syncroness Chooses ADC’s Revolutionary CopperTen™ 10-Gigabit Ethernet UTP Cabling For New Headquarters
Trường học University of Colorado Boulder
Chuyên ngành Engineering
Thể loại Case Study
Thành phố Westminster
Định dạng
Số trang 4
Dung lượng 140,96 KB

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Designing leading-edge products with lead-ing-edge tools; there is hardly a more precise statement to illustrate why Syncroness has emerged as a global player in new product development.

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Designing leading-edge products with lead-ing-edge tools; there is hardly a more precise statement to illustrate why Syncroness has emerged as a global player in new product development It also explains why the firm chose ADC to provide high-performance cabling infrastructure for its new corporate headquarters in Westminster, Colorado

“Our business is totally dependant upon our number one tool – computer power,” said Jörg Lorsheider, Syncroness’ director of business development and sales “Our network has to be operational at peak proficiency 100 percent of the time and that means it needs to work quickly When we considered the available choices for high-performance Ethernet cabling, we found that ADC’s new CopperTen system has capabilities far beyond anything else on the market.”

COLOSSAL FILES REQUIRE ENORMOUS CAPABILITIES

Syncroness employs more than 30 mechanical engineers who use the most-advanced computer-aided design (CAD) software to invent or improve a wide variety of products; from golf clubs to exercise machines, medical devices to products used in space exploration With offices in Irvine, California and Kuala

SYNCRONESS CHOOSES ADC’S REVOLUTIONARY COPPERTEN

10-GIGABIT ETHERNET UTP CABLING FOR NEW HEADQUARTERS

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Lumpur, Malaysia, Syncroness engineers

create and share immense amounts of data

among themselves and their clients around

the world

“We operate a variety of different CAD

systems that require us to transfer

multi-megabit files all over the place,” said

Lorscheider “In fact, we generate 25 gigs

of new or revised data each week and,

for a business of this size, that’s a lot of

data That’s more than a lot of big

com-panies generate.”

Syncroness also utilizes complex simulation

software to perform fluid dynamics

compu-tations and structural and thermal analyses

on products These processes rely on

dis-tributed computing to combine the

resources of several separate processors

while consuming large amounts of

band-width in order to solve problems “We

share information over tens of thousands of

miles – between the United States and

Malaysia We certainly don’t want to create

a bottleneck here in our own office.”

Syncroness evaluated optical fiber in its

quest to provide the “biggest pipe” for its network 10-gigabit Ethernet performance was manda-tory, yet the cost of fiber optics proved prohibitive “With fiber, the expense is in the electronics,” said David Yanish, of ADC’s global product management group “It’s necessary to invest in com-plex hardware that converts electrical data into photons (light) in order to send the information over fiber optic cable, then additional hardware to reconvert that information back into electrons

at the other end That makes fiber about six times more expensive than unshielded twisted pair (UTP) cable So, with a 10-gigabit standard on the horizon, we went to work developing a com-pletely new copper solution - CopperTen.”

10 GIGABITS AND BEYOND

For years, the industry predicted a shift toward a fiber-based cabling structure within buildings But, as the need for a 10G Base-T standard emerged, ADC‘s KRONE develop-ment team invested in breakthrough design and manufacturing technologies, creating CopperTen, a complete end-to-end cabling system that delivers a solution more cost-effective and easier to install than shielded

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CASE STUDY

and fiber optic cabling systems

CopperTen is the industry’s first

aug-mented Category 6 UTP cabling system

and it is guaranteed to enable

10-giga-bit transmission to be implemented to

the full 100 meters required for

struc-tured cabling systems “In fact, we can

guarantee 18 gigabits per second of

channel capacity, and right now, no

one else can do that,” said Yanish

“Cat 6 was supposed to be the next

solution While it did produce more

bandwidth, or pipe size, it couldn’t

support 10-gig Ethernet CopperTen

does; it provides a ten-fold increase in

the transmission of large amounts of data as measured by Shannon’s Capacity*, while extending

bandwidth to enable a capacity greater than 18 gigabits per second up to 625 MHz And CopperTen

does all this while eliminating alien crosstalk.”

Alien crosstalk is signal noise generated from adjacent cables It has plagued high-capacity copper

cable designs for years ADC combats alien crosstalk with its patent-pending oblique elliptical star

filler, which never allows bordering conductors to touch or get too close to one another This design,

combined with the company’s unique cable manufacturing process, oscillate the cable pairs

off-cen-ter, isolating each connector from the other

“These components and designs working in unison result in remarkable advantages that put

CopperTen in a league by itself, representing the next generation of cabling technology.”

AN INVESTMENT IN TODAY – AND TOMORROW

CopperTen re-establishes copper as the

better-priced solution for “future-proofing” Local Area

Networks for the next protocols This first-of-a-kind

product allows a confident reach to the next level

of transmission performance

“As standards are changing, we have to stay

cur-rent and competitive,” said Lorsheider “We have

to be ready for the future by investing in the best

products for our infrastructure, such as CopperTen

We get paid by the hour, and the more work we

can produce during that hour, the more value our

customers receive while we remain competitive We

expect this network system to last and are pleased

we won’t have to rewire in five years.”

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ADC Telecommunications, Inc., P.O Box 1101, Minneapolis, Minnesota USA 55440-1101 Specifications published here are current as of the date of publication of this document Because we are continuously improving our products, ADC reserves the right to change specifications without prior notice At any time, you may verify product specifications by contacting our headquarters office in Minneapolis ADC Telecommunications, Inc views its patent portfolio as an important corporate asset and vigorously enforces its patents Products or features contained herein may be covered by one or more U.S or foreign patents An Equal Opportunity Employer

Web Site: www.adc.com

From North America, Call Toll Free: 1-800-366-3891 • Outside of North America: +1-952-938-8080 Fax: +1-952-917-3237 • For a listing of ADC’s global sales office locations, please refer to our web site.

SYNCHRONICITY

Like all business success stories, this one celebrates relationships between partners who recognize the important role each plays in reaching their individual goals When it was time to name their corporation, the five owners of Syncroness chose a name that promoted their formula for success-ful relationships Says Lorsheider, “The name describes our ability to “synchronize” our capabilities and talents with the needs of our customers; to harmonize our bases of knowledge That is the relationship we form with our customers and the kind of relationship ADC has formed with us.”

ABOUT ADC

ADC completed its acquisition of the KRONE Group on May 18, 2004 ADC is a world leader in providing global network infrastructure products, services and software that enable the profitable delivery of high-speed Internet, data, video, and voice services over our customers’ unique net-works ADC (NASDAQ: ADCT) has sales into more than 90 countries KRONE has served the indus-try as the leading manufacturer and supplier of fiber cabling, interconnection and distribution devices used in copper and fiber optic telecommunications and data networks More information

on KRONE is available at www.krone.com Lean more about ADC Telecommunications, Inc at www.adc.com

*Shannon’s Capacity formula is: Q = B log2 (1+S) concerning a communications channel: the formula that relates bandwidth in Hertz, to information carrying capacity in bits per second Where Q is the information carrying capacity (ICC), B is the bandwidth and S is the signal-to-noise ratio This expression shows that the ICC is proportional to the bandwidth, but is not identical to it.

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