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The rapid development of optical fiber transmission technology has
created the possibility for constructing digital networks that are
as ubiquitous as the current voice network but which can carry
video, voice, and data in massive qlJantities. How and when such
networks will evolve, who will pay for them, and what new
applications will use them is anyone's guess. There appears to be
no doubt, however, that the trend in telecommunication networks is
toward far greater transmission speeds and toward greater
heterogeneity in the requirements of different applications. This
book treats some of the central problems involved in these networks
of the future. First, how does one switch data at speeds orders of
magnitude faster than that of existing networks? This problem has
roots in both classical switching for telephony and in switching
for packet networks. There are a number of new twists here,
however. The first is that the high speeds necessitate the use of
highly parallel processing and place a high premium on
computational simplicity. The second is that the required data
speeds and allowable delays of different applications differ by
many orders of magnitude. The third is that it might be desirable
to support both point to point applications and also applications
involving broadcast from one source to a large set of destinations.
The rapid development of optical fiber transmission technology has
created the possibility for constructing digital networks that are
as ubiquitous as the current voice network but which can carry
video, voice, and data in massive qlJantities. How and when such
networks will evolve, who will pay for them, and what new
applications will use them is anyone's guess. There appears to be
no doubt, however, that the trend in telecommunication networks is
toward far greater transmission speeds and toward greater
heterogeneity in the requirements of different applications. This
book treats some of the central problems involved in these networks
of the future. First, how does one switch data at speeds orders of
magnitude faster than that of existing networks? This problem has
roots in both classical switching for telephony and in switching
for packet networks. There are a number of new twists here,
however. The first is that the high speeds necessitate the use of
highly parallel processing and place a high premium on
computational simplicity. The second is that the required data
speeds and allowable delays of different applications differ by
many orders of magnitude. The third is that it might be desirable
to support both point to point applications and also applications
involving broadcast from one source to a large set of destinations.
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