If your routing platform doesn't have POS OC-3, you can use a converter to map Ethernet services to it and keep using the platform you've been using. You lose a little on efficiency and failure detection, but turning BFD on might help: http://wiki.mikrotik.com/wiki/Manual:Routing/BFD
I've worked with converters from a local industry and I don't think they ship worldwide; in the US I would take at look at RAD, Transition Networks, Allied Telesis and probably some others. This is an issue not specific to Mikrotik; my experience with such a solution was with Cisco switch-routers that could do up to MPLS but had only Ethernet interfaces. Rubens On Sat, Jul 3, 2010 at 2:43 PM, Alan Bryant <a...@gtekcommunications.com> wrote: > I haven't seen much traffic on this list about Mikrotik or RouterOS, > but I thought it was worth a shot as a last ditch effort to get this > going. > > Does anyone know of a solution to connect a POS OC-3 to a router > running Mikrotik's RouterOS? I have searched google extensively with > varying phrases and nothing helpful comes out of it. > > -- > Alan Bryant | Systems Administrator > Gtek Computers & Wireless, LLC. > a...@gtekcommunications.com | www.gtek.biz > O 361-777-1400 | F 361-777-1405 > >