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From Telit: "Cellular in SD-Wan: Why It Matters"

Manish Watwani in Blogs on March 28, 2018

About Manish Watwani

Vice President Global Product Marketing at Telit

Cloud. Big data. Analytics. Mobility. The Internet of Things. Social collaboration. These are just some of a wide variety of technologies that are unlocking unprecedented innovation and transforming every aspect of business operations. However, for CIOs, this new development can be more of a headache than a blessing.

Enterprises have long relied only on private networks to give their subsidiaries, branches, or stores secure, high-performing, and highly available access to applications residing within their private data centers. However, the capacity of enterprise networks is in higher demand as data requirements increase due to rising use of videos, guest networks, IoT data, and time- and latency-sensitive applications such as voice and secure transactions. Traffic intended for the cloud is now taking an out-of-the-way route to its final destination.

Unfortunately, this new reality is only increasing operational costs, penalizing quality of service (QoS) and performance, and consuming excessive network capacity. This is driving the desire for two investments:

  • Alternative backhaul solutions – including public internet and wireless cellular networks – to connect to the main data centers
  • Necessary keys to gain more visibility into applications and traffic control from distributed locations across the enterprise network

While it would be easy to resist deploying a cloud platform or any other high-connectivity technology, I have yet to meet a business that can afford to sacrifice the potential of these investments. Could SD-WAN be the missing link to seizing the benefits of today’s latest technology while maintaining the control, reliability, visibility, and security that enterprises value most? 


SD-WAN: A potential game-changer for the distributed enterprise

Known as “software-defined wide area network,” SD-WAN promises to revolutionize how businesses connect with their distributed chain of physical locations. It simplifies and accelerates enterprise connectivity by combining multiple branch links with intelligent traffic directing across those links and with the policy-driven management of the WAN.

SD-WAN enables businesses to take advantage of three fundamental capabilities:

  • Uniting public internet, cellular, and private MPLS network links to a remote location with a single, virtual, and high-capacity source for all applications and services while fully controlling the links.
  • Customizing the enterprise’s bandwidth and connectivity to deliver specific network services to individual or a group of locations and users.
  • Defining and managing policies and network traffic from a central location, eliminating the need to configure each device manually.

Whether SD-WAN is deployed over the public internet, on LTE, with a mix of MPLS, public internet, and LTE links, or through a cloud-based private network, businesses can dramatically lower the cost of their WAN services and reduce outages. More importantly, employees and partners in remote locations gain the transparent, collaborative, and knowledge-rich environment they need to succeed.


Cellular SD-WAN

Wireless networks have evolved dramatically with LTE. Operators around the globe have been upgrading at such as rapid pace that growth in traffic demand exploded along with the increasing consumer appetite for social media and data-intensive applications. LTE-advanced technologies and wireless networks can now offer peak data rates of over 1 Gigabit per second (Gbps), which exceeds well beyond the data rates provided by traditional public internet options such as DSL. In the near future, 5G will usher in a new era of super-high data rates and ultra-low latency.

Clearly, wireless technology has outpaced wired technology to the point that enterprises are finding it difficult to ignore. Early enterprise use cases for wireless include LTE failover. But with ubiquitous coverage, increased network throughputs, and sub-10ms latency, it has the power to become the primary connection for distributed enterprises.



Telit: Meeting demands for high bandwidth and even higher expectations

Our comprehensive portfolio of high-speed, industrial-grade, and mini PCIe data card modules come in a configuration that supports mobile computing, networking, and the Internet of Things (IoT). The plug-and-play design simplifies integration and supports three form factors:

  • LM940The LM940 Mini PCle (mPCle) data card enables high-speed data rates through an advanced LTE and offers a cellular connection for products operating in network appliance environments. Designed for products that require high throughputs such as routers, mobile gateways, and access points, the data card ensures a rich and seamless user experience by tapping into the advanced connectivity of 4G LTE. Plus, LM940 is LTE-advanced because it uses LTE Category 11 to support download rates as high as 600 Mbps and uploads as fast as 75 Mbps.
  • LM960: The LM960 Mini PCIe (mPCIe) data card provides everything the LM940 mPCle delivers, but it is an LTE Category 18 device. Designed for networks that require 2x the data rate speed offered by LM940, the LM960 provides download rates up to 1.2 Gbps with 4x4 MIMO +3 CA and 1 Gbps with 2x2 MIMO + 5CA. It supports the Citizens Broadband Radio System (CBRS) and License Assisted Access (LAA) to enhance performance inside campuses, small cells, and buildings leveraging either technology to augment cellular service. LM960 also includes support for band 14 for U.S. FirstNet public safety products and brand-new life-saving applications.
  • LE910: The LE910 mPCIe data card addresses the convenience and short development cycle associated with a standard such as mPCle, which can sometimes be more important than speed. Supporting Category 4 and Category 1, this addition of LE910 Cat 1 and LE910C1 mPCIe to the data-card portfolio powers speeds as fast as 10/5 Mbps DL/UL and provides a VoLTE support option for applications requiring voice. The LE910 V2 mPCIe card is an LTE Category 4 device rated at 150/50 Mbps UP/DL speed, also supporting VoLTE.

The LM940 and LM960 data cards both support global navigation satellite systems such as GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, and Beidou.

 





For more information on Telit products, see our 2018 Telit Selector Guide.


Get ready for the next phase of your IoT strategy

These Telit data cards can help your business overcome the complexity, high costs, and bandwidth limitations of today’s LTE services. For you, this means real-time, high-quality data exchange across cable, DSL, fiber, and 4G with policy-based routing to application-specific traffic.

No more latency, no more limited connectivity, and no more lost data. Just direct internet access with connectivity guaranteed with a service level agreement and a seamless extension to cloud data centers and mobile devices.


Source: https://www.telit.com/blog/cellular-in-sd-wan-why-it-matters/

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Manish Watwani in Blogs on March 28, 2018

About Manish Watwani

Vice President Global Product Marketing at Telit

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