NJFX

NJFX CEO Gil Santaliz reports on the state of the subsea sector

NJFX CEO Gil Santaliz reports on the state of the subsea sector

Gil Santaliz

CEO

See the original article by Chris Kelly at Total Telecom

January 9, 2019

New York City has long been the center of the universe for telecommunications and early connectivity – defined originally as voice traffic for North America. TAT 8 was the first optical fiber cable that when into service in 1988 connecting New Jersey to England and France. That cable was retired in 2002.  The next 14+ fiber cable systems followed similar paths from the shores of New Jersey & Long Island, New York to Europe with one common hub and single point of failure, 60 Hudson Street in New York City. These cables traversed thousands of miles across the ocean then made precarious 60 to 150 mile treks into Lower Manhattan. This thoroughfare is now completely congested with unmanageable manhole systems – including fiber cables that can’t be recognized and abandoned in place.      

North America has a vast data center landscape today and subsea systems are changing. One difference is now these systems don’t have their only hand-off points and single points of failure located in lower-Manhattan. Also, it’s becoming more clear, that many enterprises’ network dependent businesses are connected through overlapping routes unknowingly. Some of those routes may be susceptible to damage from outages, cut networks as well as inadvertently by regrooming networks due to industry consolidation. In addition, a recent study by researchers at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and the University of Oregon found that the thousands of miles of buried fiber optic cable are at risk of drowning under the rising seas. This isn’t something that will happen far in the future, but rather could be a reality within two decades, with New York as one of the most susceptible locations.

Combined with those vulnerabilities, is the fact that the subsea cables that came online in the Internet age are reaching their end of life, and therefore, their viability. The majority of the cables in the Atlantic Ocean were put into service between 2000 and 2001. A cable’s retirement depends on both being physically operational and on the costs associated with continuing to operate it. Financially, this countdown usually begins around 20 years while physically, the cable and electronics are manufactured to last about 25 years.

So, what all of this means is that we are on the verge of a massive shift for Atlantic subsea cables. This is truly an event that has not been seen before and one that will create choke points throughout the northeast as well as possibly isolate legacy network hand off-points. As new cables become ready for service, they are driving a shift away from legacy landing points and bandwidth handoffs.  NJFX in Wall, New Jersey is a perfect example. The site was chosen as the landing point by the consortium which operates HAVFRUE in large part due to NJFX’s location, which is far enough outside New York to avoid congestion. NJFX offers route diversity to the rest of the country and most importantly provides Tier 3 data center options right at the subsea cable edge. Another unique aspect of NJFX, is that although it is at the cable landing, the site is at an elevation where you can be assured that  equipment investments of hundreds of millions of dollars will be secure and safe. This coupled with multiple subsea cables connecting four continents, and you have a game changer. 

Over the last several years, NJFX has developed the ability to attract diverse dedicated fiber backhaul across North America, creating operational independence for the very populated region of more than 100 million. Optimizing the caching of content along the main arteries of the Internet is critical. In very short order, NJFX will be able to support content that is most popular for Europe, South America, Africa and Asia. 

NJFX has also been very focused on partners and enabling customers with access to the networking architecture and tech advancements they require to be flexible and prepare for growth. This year the company has grown its carrier base and subsea cable access – to meet the high demand for diverse network architectures. NJFX has established, through its partners, new routes which bypass heavily congested regions such as NYC and Miami. This enables customers true route diversity all the way down to the subsea cable layer along with security, low-latency and access to a vast carrier ecosystem.

The NJFX CLS campus is home to the subsea cable systems TGN1, TGN2 and Seabras. Wall-LI (2020) will interconnect Long Island to New Jersey, extending  interconnection for clients across North America, Europe, Caribbean, South America, Africa and AsiaPac. In addition, as noted, NJFX was chosen as the landing point for the latest transatlantic subsea cable system, HAVFRUE/AEC2 (2019). The goal of NJFX being a strategic landing point for the world’s subsea deployments and serve as a major interconnection for global communications is being realized. 

NJFX CEO Gil Santaliz will be speaking at this year’s Submarine Networks EMEA 2019 event in London. Gil will be taking part in the Day 1, Keynote panel, titled ‘Making waves: Emerging strategies & opportunities in the subsea cable industry’

CLICK HERE for a full agenda and details of how you can be involved. 

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About NJFX:

NJFX is a Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station campus. Our colocation ecosystem has expanded to over 35 network operators offering flexibility, reliability, and security. Our Wall, NJ location provides direct access to multiple subsea cable systems giving our carriers diverse connectivity solutions and offers direct interconnection without recurring cross-connect fees.

More In the News

NJFX CEO Gil Santaliz reports on the state of the subsea sector Read More »

TEAM NJFX TO SPEAK AT PTC’19 IN HAWAII – JANUARY 20-23, 2019

TEAM NJFX TO SPEAK AT PTC’19 IN HAWAII – JANUARY 20-23, 2019

Gil Santaliz

CEO

January 7, 2019

NJFX CEO Gil Santaliz and Vice President of Business Development Roy Hilliard, are bringing their thought leadership expertise to the Pacific Telecommunications Council conference in Honolulu, Hawaii, taking place January 20-23, 2019.

The annual PTC conference is the Pacific Rim’s premier telecommunications event, this year focusing its event on a year-long initiative called “From Pipes to Platforms”, highlighting the infrastructure and platforms behind the bandwidth and interconnectivity that is absolutely crucial to today’s level of content development.  

The conference theme directly aligns with NJFX’s mission, as it is the only CLS colocation campus in the U.S offering Tier 3, carrier neutral data center capabilities with direct access to TGN 1 & 2, Seaborn, HAVFRUE/AEC2 (2019) and Wall-LI (2020) subsea cable systems.

On Sunday January 20th, Mr. Santaliz will present at the event’s annual “Global Submarine Cable Update”. This not-to-miss panel is one of the highlights of the event, as industry leaders provide the latest on what’s happening across the globe with cable projects and regulation.

On Tuesday January 22nd, Mr. Hilliard will weigh in on the topical session, “Developing Tomorrow’s Networks”, addressing issues about scalable and agile network infrastructures and how networks can evolve to support and enable IoT adoption and prepare for 5G.

To request a meeting in Honolulu at PTC’19 with members of the leadership team, please contact meetings@njfx.net.

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About NJFX:

NJFX is a Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station campus. Our colocation ecosystem has expanded to over 35 network operators offering flexibility, reliability, and security. Our Wall, NJ location provides direct access to multiple subsea cable systems giving our carriers diverse connectivity solutions and offers direct interconnection without recurring cross-connect fees.

More In the News

TEAM NJFX TO SPEAK AT PTC’19 IN HAWAII – JANUARY 20-23, 2019 Read More »

MEET NJFX AT PTC’19 IN HAWAII – JANUARY 20-23, 2019

MEET NJFX AT PTC’19 IN HAWAII – JANUARY 20-23, 2019

Gil Santaliz

CEO

Felix Seda

General Manager

December 19, 2018

NJFX, the only CLS colocation campus in the U.S offering Tier 3, carrier neutral data center capabilities with direct access to TGN 1 & 2, Seaborn, HAVFRUE/AEC2 (2019) and Wall-LI (2020) subsea cable systems, is getting ready to say ALOHA, as we head to PTC’s annual conference in Honolulu, HI.

The Pacific Telecommunications Council’s annual conference is the Pacific Rim’s premier telecommunications event, taking place from January 20-23, 2019. This year’s event will focus on and kick-off a year-long initiative for PTC: “From Pipes to Platforms” to highlight the infrastructure and platforms behind the bandwidth and interconnectivity that is absolutely crucial to today’s level of content development. The frequency and quantity of content continues to increase at an exponential rate, and the connectivity must be the backbone for this content.

This directly lines up with NJFX’s mission. NJFX owns and operates a 64,800 square foot purpose-built Tier 3 Cable Landing Station (CLS) Colocation facility and 58-acre campus in Wall, NJ. This unique campus is the only CLS colocation campus in the U.S supported by several route-independent carriers that offer direct access to multiple independent subsea cable systems interconnecting North America, Europe, South America and the Caribbean.

“NJFX does something that no other facility can: provide a viable alternative for carriers and large organizations to design resilient network architectures and further ensure global networks stay operational,” commented Gil Santaliz, CEO for NJFX.

2018 has been a year of milestones in connectivity for NJFX, and we look forward to more growth and collaboration in 2019 and beyond. To request a meeting in Honolulu at PTC’19 with members of the leadership team, send a message to meetings@njfx.net.

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About NJFX:

NJFX is a Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station campus. Our colocation ecosystem has expanded to over 35 network operators offering flexibility, reliability, and security. Our Wall, NJ location provides direct access to multiple subsea cable systems giving our carriers diverse connectivity solutions and offers direct interconnection without recurring cross-connect fees.

More In the News

MEET NJFX AT PTC’19 IN HAWAII – JANUARY 20-23, 2019 Read More »

Epsilon Activates New Next-Gen Network Route to Europe, Bypassing NYC at the NJFX CLS 

Epsilon Activates New Next-Gen Network Route to Europe, Bypassing NYC at the NJFX CLS

New Route Strategically Bypasses NYC from Ashburn, Virginia, Where 70% of the Internet Computes To Meet the High Demand for Diverse Network Architectures.

December 3, 2018

Wall, NJ –  NJFX, the only Cable Landing Station (CLS) colocation campus in the U.S offering Tier 3, carrier-neutral data center capabilities, announces Epsilon a privately-owned global communications service provider, activated a next-generation network route at NJFX to meet the high demand for diverse network architectures. This new, independent route is now operational with live customer traffic and bypasses legacy NYC chokepoints, providing a secure network option to Europe from Ashburn, Virginia.

“The leadership role Epsilon has taken to support the global networking community is recognized as a critical connectivity infrastructure initiative; eliminating single points of failure like NYC and ensuring global traffic isn’t impacted by issues in the region,” states Gil Santaliz, CEO for NJFX. “NJFX’s innovative Tier 3 CLS ‘Clarity in Connectivity’ approach is now being introduced as the standard for North American financials and multinational enterprises to also fortify their network routes and eliminate single points of failure from the US national data hubs.”

Founded on helping carriers strategically diversify their connectivity options, NJFX provides secure access to key hubs across North America and Europe, improving upon legacy architectures and paving the way for innovative capabilities. Through NJFX, network service providers can also leverage Epsilon’s on-demand connectivity platform, Infiny. Infiny is a Software-Defined Networking (SDN) platform that gives users access to on-demand local, regional and global connectivity. Epsilon’s Global Network Fabric currently extends to over 100 datacenters in North America, Europe, Asia the Middle East and Africa, and offers direct interconnects to the leading Cloud Service Providers and Internet Exchanges (IXs). Users of the Infiny on-demand connectivity platform can turn up network services anytime, anywhere via a web-based portal, their smartphone or even integrated APIs.

The next step in eliminating points of failure in the US will be bypassing Miami as the only major gateway for LATAM and the Caribbean. This is now available from NJFX in conjunction with several carriers using a cable system connecting New Jersey to Boca Raton, Florida via the Atlantic, then routing directly to Puerto Rico.

In addition, NJFX is participating at Subsea Americas 2018 conference this week in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Santaliz is featured on the December 4th panel, “Riding the Upcoming Wave of Subsea Cable Optimization – How Are Data Centers Ahead of the Curve?” Santaliz, along with other industry leaders, will discuss benefits of connecting subsea cable systems at a data center, subsea cable optimization achievements, emerging markets and industry drivers.  As the only event that focused exclusively on cables connecting or landing in North, South, and Central America, the conference highlights new cable builds and the stakeholders involved in bringing these subsea projects to fruition.

Winner of the 2018 Global Carrier Award for Best North American Project, NJFX offers direct access to five subsea cable systems including TGN1, TGN2, Seaborn, HAVFRUE/AEC2 (2019) and Wall-LI (2020). For more information, please visit www.NJFX.net.

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About NJFX:

NJFX is a Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station campus. Our colocation ecosystem has expanded to over 35 network operators offering flexibility, reliability, and security. Our Wall, NJ location provides direct access to multiple subsea cable systems giving our carriers diverse connectivity solutions and offers direct interconnection without recurring cross-connect fees.

More In the News

Epsilon Activates New Next-Gen Network Route to Europe, Bypassing NYC at the NJFX CLS  Read More »

SubCableNews Interviews NJFX CEO Gil Santaliz at Submarine Networks World 2018 in Singapore

SubCableNews Intervews NJFX CEO Gil Santaliz at Submarine Networks World 2018 in Singapore

At the recent Submarine Networks World 2018 event in Singapore, SubCableNews interviewed Gil Santaliz, Chief Executive Officer of NJFX.

Gil Santaliz

CEO

November 27, 2018

SCN:
Congratulations to your recent news that the HAVFRUE Transatlantic Subsea Cable System will land at your Campus. There is no shortage of options for reaching submarine cable systems or data center providers that offer them on the East Coast. There are numerous cable landing stations in New York, New Jersey, and Rhode Island, as well as in Massachusetts and Florida, connecting to Europe, Middle East, Africa, South America, and the Caribbean. What is the secret behind the success of NJFX to win over another cable system to terminate in your Campus?

SANTALIZ:
There a few variables to consider when landing a subsea cable in North America including:

Front Haul. The cost from the beach to a cable landing station can be expensive in a greenfield project, as well knowing that the route will be safe over time without unplanned delays in construction. At the NJFX Campus we have existing front haul owned by others to choose from, which have been proven over the last 20 years.

Elevation matters. Over the last several years storms have brought severe damage, not just from storm surge but also with historic rain. Our natural elevation of 60+ ft above sea level makes NJFX unique with the inclusion of a utility-owned substation on our campus. Reliable power, as well elevation make up some of the unique characteristics

SCN:
Which will be first – data center or subsea network – will data centers in the future dictate the landing points for subsea cables?

SANTALIZ:
Subsea landing points are not going away as they are the most travelled path for global data. NJFX allowed for economies of scale by making the landing point a carrier neutral Tier 3 location with a campus. Traditionally, this was a cost center for the subsea network which overtime was starved for cost savings. Our NJFX model makes for a robust network hub where subsea systems meet diverse multiple fiber backhaul carriers. This enables diversity and a competitive market place for everyone. Every participant gets better ROI, especially the early adopters which have unique assets the market can monetize.

SCN:
What is the cost benefit of terminating in data centers over traditional cable landing stations?

SANTALIZ:
A data center is a different standard of construction, which allows for concurrently maintained systems to provide 99.9999 availability. Traditionally, a CLS could lose power and rely on the other side of the cable to support the system operation or might have a sister cable which could manage an outage, so the investment might not be there in developing the site. Our scalable campus started with phase 1 of 6 in our Tier 3 facility with room for operationally independent facilities for others that could want to peer, cache data, establish independent CLS options or additional colocation for latency sensitive applications.

SCN:
The landing of submarine cables in the US have recently shifted towards Virginia, do you see that as a healthy competition or is NJFX planning to invest in other data centers at other landing sites?

SANTALIZ:
Balancing networks are important and NJFX is a great partner. Today, Virginia Beach only has one non carrier-neutral CLS where they are working with 2 subsea cables, which should also be represented at NJFX. Our carriers should look at protecting their capacity through Virginia Beach and Long Island as alternate transatlantic crossings. What is irresponsible is to tether to a CLS from a distant carrier hotel to multiple CLS’s and create a single point of failure – miles away from the real HUB, the CLS Campus. NYC and Miami have already shown us the vulnerabilities of this type of configuration.

SCN:
Will OTT’s not operate or build their own data centers/interconnection facilities – or will they always outsource this to companies like NJFX?

SANTALIZ:
Again, being carrier-neutral we can take advantage of creating communities of interest with economies of scale in a way others can’t.

SCN:
Is the NJFX model unique? Or could that be transferred to other parts of the World?

SANTALIZ:
We hope to see other countries take advantage of our concept. In fairness, Interxion has led this effort successfully in Marseille over the last few years and Djibouti Data Center in Africa are also moving in this direction.

SCN:
What does the future hold for NJFX, what are plans to grow with this very dynamic industry?

SANTALIZ:
The peering community is our next focus as peering has always been local. Our neighboring metro is NYC of which we hope to offer a diverse play for that community at the NJ Shore with unrivalled capacity and wholesale rates. Our campus can support additional colocation facilities – again purpose built to provide the interconnection model of the future globally local.

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About NJFX:

NJFX is a Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station campus. Our colocation ecosystem has expanded to over 35 network operators offering flexibility, reliability, and security. Our Wall, NJ location provides direct access to multiple subsea cable systems giving our carriers diverse connectivity solutions and offers direct interconnection without recurring cross-connect fees.

More In the News

SubCableNews Interviews NJFX CEO Gil Santaliz at Submarine Networks World 2018 in Singapore Read More »

What Happens When Subsea Cables Reach Their End of Life?

What Happens When Subsea Cables Reach Their End of Life?

November 19, 2018

Private global networks for multinational companies are based on promised physical network diversity. If pushed for additional clarity, maybe a KMZ, route map or subsea cable listing would be provided.  This is a solid approach but is only good for that specific time and that specific setup. There are thousands of miles of subsea cables bridging the gap between you and your colleague in Brazil, or your leadership team in London, or the data center that is hosting the app you just launched. Today, with our aging subsea system and technology like MPLS becoming old-school with SDN platforms reducing costs and increasing performance, traditional carriers need to educate their Enterprise customers on a new reality in terms of local and global network diversity.

The majority of the cables in the Atlantic Ocean were put into service between 2000 and 2001.  Like most things, subsea cables have a shelf life. And unlike wine, they do not get more expensive with age, quite the opposite. It becomes more difficult to financially support repairs and although there is less available capacity, new customers are brought on at much lower price points. The result is a cable’s retirement depends on both being physically operational and on the costs associated with continuing to operate it. Financially, this countdown usually begins around 20 years while physically, the cable and electronics are manufactured to last about 25 years.

So, what all of this means is that we are on the verge of a massive shift for Atlantic subsea cables, an event Telegeography recently called “the next mass extinction”. This is truly an event that has not been seen before and one that will create choke points throughout the northeast as well as possibly isolate legacy network hand off-points.

Can Your Network Survive?

When the latest upgrade of cable systems was completed nearly 20 years ago, smartphones barely existed. The bandwidth needs were there, but the amount of access points and demands were served by multiple systems. The bandwidth players had redundancy built across these cable systems to support their needs. However, bandwidth growth and demands have surged. Cisco Global 2020 Forecast predicts global Internet traffic will be 5.3 exabytes a day by 2020. In perspective, this means that global internet traffic will be the equivalent of 55 million DVDs per hour.

This anticipated growth is staggering. One of the ways the industry is addressing this growth is through new subsea cables. Nigel Bayliff, CEO for Aqua Comms and a longtime industry leader says, “Fifteen years ago, there were seven to eight cables that were built, and those cables were part of a massive oversupply to the requirements of the day. Pricing for the building of cables shot through the roof.” While this left an oversupply in the market at the time, all of that is coming to an end due to the massive amounts of bandwidth demands and requirements of enterprises, carriers, Over-the-Top (OTT) providers, financial firms, government entities and other high capacity organizations. Aqua Comms is part of a consortium operating a new cable, named HAVFRUE/AEC-2, that will have 18-20 terabits of capacity per fiber pair. Compared to the existing cables which were approximately 5 terabits, the new cable will more than handle all the jeopardized capacity. Additionally, 10G has been the standard for US based multinational banks and now some of those banks’ engineers are asking the hard questions such as, “How do I get to the CLS, can I cost effectively get my own dark fiber and pick my subsea cable access at 100g or 400G and fast?!” Banks are also looking at how operations might change if bandwidth is no longer an issue inside the network in the US and globally, when it comes big data applications.

Collateral Damage from the Subsea Shift

As an established financial hub, New York has long been the center of the universe for telecommunications. It makes sense, when you think about the numerous cable landing stations that are on Long Island. It’s a vast data center landscape with other subsea systems having their hand-off points in the city. Yet although a subsea system may land in, say New Jersey, customers were only able to access the system from legacy carrier handoffs, or PoPs.  As these new cables become ready for service, they are driving another shift, which is away from legacy landing points and bandwidth handoffs.  NJFX in Wall, New Jersey is a perfect example. The site was chosen as the landing point by the consortium which operates HAVFRUE in large part due to NJFX’s location, which is far enough outside New York to avoid congestion. NJFX offers route diversity to the rest of the country and most importantly provides Tier 3 data center options right at the actual cable landing.

There is a Bright Future

All of this activity and shifting has forced an evolution, a sea change. It coincides with most examples of old ways of doing business being surpassed with a new approach. The tricky part is the timing of cable retirement is harder to predict.  What is not difficult to see is that there are new cables with great capability coming online. These cables interconnect at improved hubs with partners that have network elements up and running and able to provision in near real time securely and efficiently.  This extinction is not an end, but rather a new beginning for what is sure to prove out to be a much stronger model.

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About NJFX:

NJFX is a Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station campus. Our colocation ecosystem has expanded to over 35 network operators offering flexibility, reliability, and security. Our Wall, NJ location provides direct access to multiple subsea cable systems giving our carriers diverse connectivity solutions and offers direct interconnection without recurring cross-connect fees.

More In the News

What Happens When Subsea Cables Reach Their End of Life? Read More »

New Jersey is the Gateway to the World: A Week in Review at NJFX

New Jersey is the Gateway to the World: A Week in Review at NJFX

Gil Santaliz

CEO

November 15, 2018

NJFX hosted events this week centered around connecting the world with infrastructure, new technology, and new partners through the interconnected hub at the Wall, New Jersey Tier 3 CLS colocation campus. The direct subsea cable landings and a host of partners to address domestic as well as cloud connectivity drove this week’s discussions.

The week started with another edition of the C-Forum with a discussion centered on China connectivity options. China Unicom America, the world’s fourth-largest mobile service provider discussed leveraging NJFX’s carrier neutral data center and global interconnection capabilities for low latency, Alibaba cloud connections, as well as mobile and voice.  NJFX is uniquely positioned to offer China Unicom and other AsiaPac carriers, financial firms, and telecoms an east coast gateway and serve as a major hub of best in breed services including end-to end SD WAN, blockchain, and secure cloud access through its many service provider clients. Located on the edge of domestic and international networks and subsea cables, NJFX enables enterprises, financials and carriers to utilize direct routing, eliminate single points of failure and avoid typical network congestion points.

“Global communication providers require not only secure and reliable infrastructure, but also the agile framework in which to leverage leading technology,” comments Gil Santaliz, CEO and Founder of NJFX. “To stay competitive, its essential to obtain the reach, low latency access and flexibility to power critical applications, and NJFX’s award-winning data center provides the foundation for telecommunication and subsea cable providers to do just that.”

Through NJFX, a company can establish a presence on the U.S. east coast and can gain access to three (soon to be five) subsea cables, implement core operations, and back-up infrastructures. China Unicom America and others can also leverage NJFX’s efficient pathway to South America via Seabras-1, the first direct route between São Paulo and New York and lands at NJFX’s CLS facility

Opening direct access from NJFX CLS to Alibaba and other cloud providers is key for the new connectivity models needed to support enterprise applications. These new models were on display during the Silicon Shores event which NJFX hosted for the NJ Tech Council.  A wide variety of enterprises and providers discussed the changes in subsea network options, resiliency, and SDWAN solutions.  Our key partner, Epsilon demonstrated the Infiny platform to the group, displaying how on-demand networking is a reality and the advantages it has across industries. 

NJFX’s unique ecosystem of partners bring together inter-exchanging capacity and capabilities to enable new solutions including exploring blockchain technology through Open Crypto Trust.  The focus is always to enable:

  • Increased resiliency
  • Lower latencies
  • Increased access to higher speed connectivity
  • Increased capacity options
  • Removal of single points of failure

All of this is essential for spurring new technologies, innovative ways of communicating and making things happen globally.

NJFX also hosted the New Jersey Tech Council earlier this week, for NJTC’s signature event “Silicon Shore”, bringing together business and tech leaders on the NJFX campus.  New Jersey has long been a center of innovation and tech advancement from the days of Bell Labs, where the first fiber optics were created. The New Jersey Tech Council has a simple vision, to create a vibrant and connected business community in the tech sector, and Santaliz agrees. “New Jersey has a great deal of untapped potential at the moment. The infrastructure is here, the resources are here to make the epicenter of global connectivity, right here in New Jersey.”

View the interconnections of NJFX subsea partners on the NJFX Subsea Exchange map, illustrating diversity to NY, Canada, Asia-Pac, South America and Europe: https://www.njfx.net/assets/dl/NJFX-subsea-exchange.pdf

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About NJFX:

NJFX is a Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station campus. Our colocation ecosystem has expanded to over 35 network operators offering flexibility, reliability, and security. Our Wall, NJ location provides direct access to multiple subsea cable systems giving our carriers diverse connectivity solutions and offers direct interconnection without recurring cross-connect fees.

More In the News

New Jersey is the Gateway to the World: A Week in Review at NJFX Read More »

Blockchain startup OpenCryptoTrust Signs Deal with NJFX, Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station Campus

Blockchain startup OpenCryptoTrust Signs Deal with NJFX, Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station Campus

Gil Santaliz

EO

See the original article at OPENCT

November 12, 2018

ZUG, SWITZERLAND –  OpenCryptoTrust (OpenCT) has announced a five-year commitment at NJFX, the only CLS colocation campus in the U.S offering Tier 3, carrier neutral data center capabilities, to support its blockchain-based telco infrastructure in the domestic and international markets.

This positions OpenCT as one of the first blockchain players within the world of telco and places them in direct line with prestigious NJFX’s customers. As a highly interconnected hub, NJFX is an ideal location for firms to leverage OpenCryptoTrust solutions.

“NJFX represents one of the most significant cable landing systems with worldwide access, to ever cross the Atlantic,” comments Mayande Walker, CEO for OpenCT. “We are proud to be a part of the NJFX CLS colocation campus that will further our goal to make New Jersey one of our main strategic access points in the US blockchain ecosystem and will serve as a major interconnection for global communications.”

“Global interconnection is exactly what NJFX provides as the first and only cable landing station colocation campus in the United States,” states Roy Hilliard, VP of Business Development for NJFX. “NJFX sees the partnership as a logical extension to the NJFX hub of services that our service provider clients provide and that enterprises are looking for as a way to efficiently and securely enable critical applications.”

OpenCT has achieved a solution which telco industry analysts have described as “the Holy Grail application/service for carrier services” – real-time bandwidth usage billing. This is facilitated thru two ground-breaking functions (predictive real time provisioning and smart contracts) that ultimately support enterprise bandwidth-on-demand. In addition, customers will be able to dynamically scale up or ‘burst’ connectivity during times of peak demand. Enterprise customers have never had the ability to pay for actual bandwidth usage – this innovation means no more inefficient long-term leases.

OpenCT is using blockchain technology in an entirely new way to support modern telecommunication services. They have modified the blockchain protocol itself to support ultra-secure data transport – and superior management overlay. Through smart contracts (on their own hybrid blockchain) there is the ability for strategic carrier partners to offer their large-scale enterprise customers a new way to pay for bandwidth.

Through advanced optical switches that monitor application traffic requirements, OpenCT can use predictive measures to establish and tear down Dense Wave Division Multiplexing (DWDM) lambdas against transatlantic/transpacific circuits (in fact all optical-based circuits) – supporting near real time provisioning and decommissioning, especially the high costs incurred due to expensive transoceanic links.

Notes to the Editor:

NJFX (New Jersey Fiber Exchange) owns and operates a 64,800 square foot purpose-built Tier 3 CLS Colocation facility and 58-acre campus in Wall, NJ. This unique campus is supported by several route-independent carriers that offer direct access to multiple independent subsea cable systems interconnecting North America, Europe, South America and the Caribbean. High and low-density colocation solutions are available with 24/7 support. NJFX, along with its carrier ecosystem, provide a marketplace offering flexibility, reliability and security that global carriers, content providers, and enterprise/government entities utilize to drive network reliability, while reducing expenses. Located at the United States’ easternmost edge, the NJFX CLS supports diverse connectivity options and offers direct interconnection at the Cable Landing Station without recurring cross-connect fees.

OpenCryptoTrust (OpenCT) is a robust, high performance, hybrid blockchain that enables innovative solutions. OpenCT is challenging the current characterization and standardization of the functions within the telecommunications industry.

OpenCT has modified the blockchain protocol itself to support ultra-secure data transport – and superior management overlay. It has also developed two ‘killer applications’ that solve immediate problems and offer significant cost savings for telco carrier enterprise customers.

BaaT (Blockchain-as-a-Transport) transforms the use of the public internet for inexpensive, secure, enterprise-grade, data communications at significant cost reduction from private circuits.

BD-WAN (Blockchain Defined Wide Area Networking) modernizes existing pricing strategies for bandwidth – supporting ‘bandwidth on demand’ for private optical-based circuits – the ability to charge customers for the bandwidth they use. Additionally, this product is superior to existing SD-WAN solutions – in terms of security, MPLS and/or cloud routing and interoperability.

Contacts:

NJFX: VP of Business Development Roy Hilliard
email: roy@njfx.net

OpenCT: CMO Stuart G. Hall
email: stuarth@openct.io

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About NJFX:

NJFX is a Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station campus. Our colocation ecosystem has expanded to over 35 network operators offering flexibility, reliability, and security. Our Wall, NJ location provides direct access to multiple subsea cable systems giving our carriers diverse connectivity solutions and offers direct interconnection without recurring cross-connect fees.

More In the News

Blockchain startup OpenCryptoTrust Signs Deal with NJFX, Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station Campus Read More »

NJFX Wins 2018 Global Carrier Award for “Best North American Project”

NJFX Wins 2018 Global Carrier Award for “Best North American Project”

Gil Santaliz

CEO

October 25, 2018

London – NJFX, the only CLS colocation campus in the U.S offering Tier 3, carrier neutral data center capabilities with direct access to TGN 1 & 2, Seaborn and HAVFRUE/AEC2 (2019) subsea cable systems, is thrilled to accept the 2018 Global Carrier Award for Best North American Project.

The Best North American Project award recognizes NJFX’s innovative approach in helping carriers strategically diversify connectivity options to key hubs across North America, Europe, and South America, bypassing legacy chokepoints.

By naming NJFX for Best North American Project, Capacity Media recognizes NJFX’s campus expansion – adding 48 acres to the current footprint and a plan for an 80,000 square foot data center and disaster recovery space adjacent to the existing NJFX facility. The expansion will allow for NJFX to improve on its route diversity and benefit the telecoms marketplace by allowing more tenants to take advantage of the unique colocation and interconnection capabilities of NJFX. The space will also be able to accommodate future independent cable landing stations and/or independent data centers.

“With a total of three subsea cables, soon to be five, coming into its colocation campus, NJFX is rivalling any location in terms of having a vast amount of subsea cable capacity in one place, and a vibrant and growing ecosystem of submarine cables,” comments Gil Santaliz, CEO for NJFX. “NJFX does something that no other facility can: provide a viable alternative for carriers and large organizations to design resilient network architectures and further ensure global networks stay operational.”

The Global Carrier Awards are a highlight of  Capacity Europe 2018, an event uniting 400+ industry leaders from across the international carrier community. As the largest carrier event in Europe, Capacity Europe is the annual meeting for carriers, data centers, IXPs, ISPs, cloud & content providers and infrastructure vendors to partner, trade and renew business.

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About NJFX:

NJFX is a Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station campus. Our colocation ecosystem has expanded to over 35 network operators offering flexibility, reliability, and security. Our Wall, NJ location provides direct access to multiple subsea cable systems giving our carriers diverse connectivity solutions and offers direct interconnection without recurring cross-connect fees.

More In the News

NJFX Wins 2018 Global Carrier Award for “Best North American Project” Read More »

Epsilon using NJFX to allow SDN to bypass New York

Epsilon using NJFX to allow SDN to bypass New York

See the original article at Capacity Media.

October 22, 2018

Epsilon has extended its software-defined networking (SDN) platform, Infiny, to offer the ability to bypass New York entirely.

The company has connected its network backbone to NJFX’s facility in Wall, New Jersey, it announced today.

“NJFX is a pivotal data centre for transatlantic traffic,” said Epsilon CEO Jerzy Szlosarek. “With multiple transatlantic cables coming directly into the NJFX facility, connectivity can happen right at the edge, without legacy bottlenecks, and can then continue across North America via the complete Epsilon network.”

Epsilon customers can connect directly to Europe from NJFX in Wall via the Transatlantic Bridge, including the TGN cable as well as the Havfrue (AEC2) cable when it is ready for service.

The company said that NJFX, with its carrier partners, has transformed its data centre into an interconnection hub offering direct access to multiple independent subsea cable systems connecting North and South America, Europe and the Caribbean.

NJFX offers Tier 3 carrier-neutral data centre capabilities with direct access to multiple subsea cables.

Users of Infiny will gain access to such connectivity services on-demand via web-based portal, mobile applications and APIs, said Epsilon.

“NJFX is proud to be an integral part of Epsilon’s Global Network Fabric,” said NJFX CEO Gil Santaliz. “As applications and client demands continue to push the need for data to be closer to the edge, NJFX is meeting and exceeding that demand by providing strong interconnections between customers, partners and subsea cable systems.”

Epsilon’s global network is deployed across over 100 points of presence globally and includes an interconnect ecosystem of 600 service providers, cloud services providers and internet exchanges. Epsilon also has PoPs in Seattle, Los Angeles, Chicago and in Canada, with 100G services all on-demand, providing agile network capability and supporting high capacity connectivity.

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About NJFX:

NJFX is a Tier 3 Carrier Neutral Cable Landing Station campus. Our colocation ecosystem has expanded to over 35 network operators offering flexibility, reliability, and security. Our Wall, NJ location provides direct access to multiple subsea cable systems giving our carriers diverse connectivity solutions and offers direct interconnection without recurring cross-connect fees.

More In the News

Epsilon using NJFX to allow SDN to bypass New York Read More »

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