These days, it's a LOT easier to get dedicated ethernet wave service
between A and Z than it used to be. The pseudowire options were developed
to fill that gap that customers wanted.

Still certainly use cases for it, but generally the dedicated waves are
much easier to get and probably cheaper. The providers would certainly
prefer NOT to sell you that service either in most cases, because they
don't want the overhead of running their parts either, and would like to
see it die on the vine.

On Thu, Dec 26, 2024 at 9:37 PM Mike Hammett <na...@ics-il.net> wrote:

> A few years back, every Tom, Dick, and Harry was touting MPLS or Carrier
> Ethernet NNIs with 10G ports everywhere. They still are. However, I rarely
> have seen that graduate to 100G ports and I don't think I've seen anyone
> talk about 400G ports.
>
> Is the hardware not there, or is it more a case of the technology hasn't
> been deployed widely, so it'll only be seen at a limited number of
> locations? I'm assuming it's more of the latter as the bigger hardware I've
> been looking at touts those features and port sizes, but maybe there's some
> other unadvertised limitation.
>
>
>
> -----
> Mike Hammett
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