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posted by martyb on Thursday April 09 2020, @07:51PM   Printer-friendly
from the what-is-that-in-LOCs-per-second? dept.

Rebranded Ethernet Technology Consortium Unveils 800 Gigabit Ethernet

With an increasing demand for networking speed and throughput performance within the datacenter and high performance computing clusters, the newly rebranded Ethernet Technology Consortium has announced a new 800 Gigabit Ethernet technology. Based upon many of the existing technologies that power contemporary 400 Gigabit Ethernet, the 800GBASE-R standard is looking to double performance once again, to feed ever-hungrier datacenters.

The recently-finalized standard comes from the Ethernet Technology Consortium, the non-IEEE, tech industry-backed consortium formerly known as the 25 Gigabit Ethernet Consortium. The group was originally created to develop 25, 50, and 100 Gigabit Ethernet technology, and while IEEE Ethernet standards have since surpassed what the consortium achieved, the consortium has stayed formed to push even faster networking speeds, and changing its name to keep with the times. Some of the biggest contributors and supporters of the ETC include Broadcom, Cisco, Google, and Microsoft, with more than 40 companies listed as integrators of its work.

[...] All told, the 800GbE standard is the latest step for an industry as a whole that is moving to Terabit (and beyond) Ethernet. And while those future standards will ultimately require faster [Serializer/Deserializer (SerDes)] to drive the required individual lane speeds, for now 800GBASE-R can deliver 800GbE on current generation hardware. All of which should be a boon for the standard's intended hyperscaler and HPC operator customers, who are eager to get more bandwidth between systems.

Related: As 100 Gbps Ethernet Picks Up, Google Ponders 5 Petabits Per Second
Ethernet Switch Sales Flat, But 40 Gbps Sales Take Off
Here Comes 5Gbps Networking Over Standard Cables
Aquantia Launches 2.5/5/10G Ethernet Chips for Consumers
25G/50G Ethernet Specification Finalized


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  • (Score: 2) by bzipitidoo on Thursday April 09 2020, @09:26PM (2 children)

    by bzipitidoo (4388) on Thursday April 09 2020, @09:26PM (#980670) Journal

    On my pathetic, aging wired home network, I'm still using a mix of 1G and 10/100M stuff! Hey, that's faster than WiFi!

    Big companies with lots of resources get to have entirely too much fun with the latest and greatest.

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  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Thursday April 09 2020, @10:30PM

    by takyon (881) <reversethis-{gro ... s} {ta} {noykat}> on Thursday April 09 2020, @10:30PM (#980680) Journal

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wi-Fi#Versions [wikipedia.org]

    Wi-Fi 5 and 6 can theoretically exceed 1 Gbps.

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  • (Score: 2) by DannyB on Sunday April 12 2020, @05:28PM

    by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Sunday April 12 2020, @05:28PM (#981595) Journal

    When I moved into the house I still live in, the guy who owned it previously must have done something that involved a LOT of phones.

    Phone jacks in every room. All leading to a set of punch down blocks in a closet in a bedroom in the basement. A space on the wood where some additional equipment had previously been.

    In the 90's this was great! I could run 10baseT ethernet on it just fine. That then had both AppleTalk and TCP/IP. It was great. Everything was on this wired network. Even the series 2 TiVo (back in the day).

    Eventually we added a bit of WiFi. Gradually we used more and more WiFi. Eventually we stopped using the wired network. That was kind of sad, since it had been so cool back in the day.

    Also I lived in an area in the midwest that was one of the first places to get cable modem internet service. It was wonderful. Always on. Way faster than dial up. But it was early tech. Years later the cable system had to switch everyone to DOCSIS.

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