Industry News

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.

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7 QUESTIONS WITH GIL SANTALIZ

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

7 QUESTIONS WITH GIL SANTALIZ

7 QUESTIONS WITH GIL SANTALIZ Talking Technology Trends with NJFX’s CEO As Featured in SUBMARINE TELECOMS FORUM (Issue 122 January 2022) Gil Santaliz CEO January

Read More »

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.

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

Aqua Comms reports progress on their development of the North Atlantic Loop – Irish Sea & North Sea segments under survey

Aqua Comms reports progress on their development of the North Atlantic Loop – Irish Sea & North Sea segments under survey

October 15, 2018

DUBLIN –  Aqua Comms DAC (“Aqua Comms”), the operator of Ireland’s first dedicated subsea fibre-optic network interconnecting New York, Dublin and London, announces today its continuing development of the North Atlantic Loop. The owners of America Europe Connect-1 (AEC-1) and CeltixConnect-1 (CC-1) are building on its vision of efficient submarine infrastructure ownership through further investment to develop a resilient dual-path network across the Atlantic between North America and Europe.

Aqua Comms has previously announced America Europe Connect-2 (AEC-2) as its ownership share in HAVFRUE, a new transatlatlantic cable set to land at New Jersey Fiber Exchange (NJFX) and will connect New Jersey with Ireland, Denmark and Norway.  Aqua Comms will market its portion of the latest developments under the name CeltixConnect-2 (CC-2) for the new Irish Sea cable between Dublin and Blackpool, and North Sea Connect (NSC) for the North Sea cable between Newcastle and Denmark.  Combining these new subsea cable developments with existing systems owned and operated by Aqua Comms will create a resilient, ring-based infrastructure connecting the hubs of the hyperscale data centre industry in North America, Ireland, and Scandinavia as well as providing resilience for the UK.

The building of CC-2 and NSC will provide uniquely diverse, high capacity routes and ring topology between mainland Europe, the UK, Ireland and then onwards to the US. Leased and ownership services on these two new cables will be offered from all landing stations and from carrier-neutral, metro area Points of Presence (PoPs) in Dublin, Manchester, Newcastle and Esbjerg/Copenhagen, where the system will more than double modern fibre connectivity to Denmark, increasing the diversity and reliability of the Internet to the region.

The multi-million-dollar investment in the CC-2 cable will deliver enhanced resilience and capacity between Dublin and Manchester/London, and will provide open access, carrier neutral capacity to international networks for Ireland’s businesses, ISPs and telecoms operators. NSC is the first modern system providing diversity from the UK into Northern Europe avoiding London.

Survey vessels have started mobilisation for CC-2 and NSC, and within the next few weeks, detailed manufacturing plans will be confirmed with the already-selected contractor. The cables are planned to go live in late 2019.

“These are very exciting times for Aqua Comms. We are delighted to follow up on our previously announced development plans and are pleased that this real progress is now being made towards the launch of the North Atlantic Loop in late 2019,” said Nigel Bayliff, CEO of Aqua Comms.

The Aqua Comms team will be attending Capacity Europe at the end of the month, taking place in London from 23rd to 25th October. If you would like to request a meeting with the team to discuss your long- term connectivity needs across the Atlantic Ocean, email ereihill@aquacomms.com

About Aqua Comms DAC

Aqua Comms DAC is an Irish Carriers’ Carrier specialising in building and operating submarine cable systems and supplying fibre pairs, spectrum and capacity networking solutions to the global media, content and carrier markets. It is the owner/operator of America Europe Connect-1 (AEC-1) and CeltixConnect-1 and continues to build on its vision of efficient submarine infrastructure ownership with membership of the HAVFRUE consortium and development of CeltixConnect-2 and North Sea Connect, bridging the Northern Atlantic between North America and Europe. To learn more about Aqua Comms and its portfolio of subsea cable systems visit www.aquacomms.com

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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.

Aqua Comms reports progress on their development of the North Atlantic Loop – Irish Sea & North Sea segments under survey Read More »

NJFX Welcomes Subsea Cable On-Ramp for Google, Facebook

NJFX Welcomes Subsea Cable On-Ramp for Google, Facebook

Gil Santaliz

CEO

See the original article at Data Center Frontier

September 20, 2018

The Jersey Shore is becoming a major destination for your photos, status updates and Internet searches. A new trans-Atlantic subsea cable will land in Wall Township, ferrying European Internet traffic from Google and Facebook to the New York metropolitan area.

The HAVFRUE cable, which was announced earlier this year, will land at the NJFX colocation campus in Wall, the company said today.

The HAVFRUE cable will connect New Jersey and Denmark, with branch connection to Ireland and Norway. The project is backed by a consortium that includes Google, Facebook subsea cable specialist Aqua Comms and Norwegian fiber provider Bulk Infrastructure.

The project will build on the momentum for NJFX, which is part of a movement to build new data center capacity at the cable landings that tie the global Internet together.

Gil Santaliz, the CEO and founder of NJFX, said the new cable “furthers our goal to make New Jersey a strategic landing point for the world’s subsea deployments and serve as a major interconnection for global communications.”

“The HAVFRUE cable system represents one of the most significant cable systems to ever cross the Atlantic,” said Santaliz, CEO for NJFX. “We are proud to be a part of this new subsea cable system.”

Undersea telecommunications cables are now strategic assets in the growth of hyperscale Internet companies, with companies like Google, Facebook, Microsoft and Amazon emerging as key investors. As these cloud titans focus investment in cables and new routes, it has the potential to reshape how data flows across the ocean, onto the U.S. mainland, and into the cloud.

A group of data center companies are seeking to capitalize on this trend, investing in new data centers at the areas where the cables rise from the sea. Historically, cable landing sites have featured minimal infrastructure, perhaps a manhole near the beach where they come ashore and sometimes a small facility operated by the phone company or cable owner. From there, fiber routes carry the data to carrier hotels in major cities like New York or Los Angeles.

NJFX is the largest and most ambitious of these new cable landing projects, featuring a 64,000 square foot Tier III data center built next to a cable landing station operated by Tata Communications. The facility is about a mile from the ocean, and with 10 megawatts of power capacity, and could support as many as 1,000 customers, according to Santaliz.

Santaliz believes that as content providers and cloud companies seek new ways to move data around the world, it is creating new market niches for colocation and interconnection specialists. Similar projects are underway in Virginia Beach, Boca Raton in Florida and Moncton, New Brunswick.
NJFX already has four cable systems landing at its campus facility, including TGN1, TGN2, Seabras and the coming WALL-LI project from Crosslake Fiber, the only subsea cable to directly connect New Jersey to New York

HAVFRUE is designed to deliver superior speed and lower latency design, capitalizing on advances in subsea cable construction since the original cable building boom during the dot-come era. Santaliz says that as existing transatlantic systems start reaching their 20-year life cycle, the HAVFRUE design will gain an economic advantage over its older rivals.

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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

7 QUESTIONS WITH GIL SANTALIZ

7 QUESTIONS WITH GIL SANTALIZ Talking Technology Trends with NJFX’s CEO As Featured in SUBMARINE TELECOMS FORUM (Issue 122 January 2022) Gil Santaliz CEO January

Read More »

NJFX Welcomes Subsea Cable On-Ramp for Google, Facebook Read More »

NJFX Announces HAVFRUE Transatlantic Subsea Cable System will land at its Tier-3 CLS Campus

NJFX Announces HAVFRUE Transatlantic Subsea Cable System will land at its Tier-3 CLS Campus

September 18, 2018

WALL, NJ –  NJFX, the first and only carrier-neutral Cable Landing Station Campus in the U.S to offer Tier 3, carrier-neutral data center capabilities, announces that the HAVFRUE transatlantic subsea cable system will land at its colocation campus, in Wall, New Jersey. The HAVFRUE subsea cable will be constructed between New Jersey and Denmark, with branch connection to Ireland and Norway, by a consortium that includes Aqua Comms, Bulk Infrastructure, Google and Facebook. The consortium members selected to land the HAVFRUE system in New Jersey at the NJFX Tier 3 by the Subsea Colocation campus.

“NJFX welcomes the HAVFRUE cable system to New Jersey as it represents one of the most significant cable systems to ever cross the Atlantic,” comments Gil Santaliz, CEO for NJFX. “We are proud to be a part of this new subsea cable system as it furthers our goal to make New Jersey a strategic landing point for the world’s subsea deployments and serve as a major interconnection for global communications.”

New Jersey is already rich with subsea capacity, and as the other transatlantic systems start reaching their 20-year life cycle, the HAVFRUE design will start to make the economics of the other cables unviable. In just two decades, advances in subsea cable construction have resulted in HAVFRUE’s ability to deliver superior speed and lower latency design. NJFX has also collaborated with carriers to install diverse fiber to its campus supporting carrier diversity across North America with carriers such as Altice, Crown Castle Fiber, Epsilon, Windstream, Zayo and Zenfi.

With the HAVFRUE system, NJFX now has four cable systems landing at its campus facility, including TGN1, TGN2, Seabras and the only subsea cable to directly connect New Jersey to New York, WALL-LI.  The new HAVFRUE system joins other subsea cables on the NJFX campus that interconnect Brazil, the UK and Caribbean in a single building, making NJFX the only one of its kind in North America. The NJFX campus is dedicated for interconnections to global networks with actual physical subsea cables.

Additional Coverage of this story available at:

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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.

NJFX Announces HAVFRUE Transatlantic Subsea Cable System will land at its Tier-3 CLS Campus Read More »

Windstream Boosts Connectivity Coast to Coast

Windstream Boosts Connectivity Coast to Coast

Ryan Imkemeier Explains the Importance of Equipment Maintenance, Vendor Relationships, Electrical Distribution & Managing the Team

See the original article at Capacity Media

July 22, 2022

Windstream boosts its coast to coast connectivity with increased capacity options from NJFX’s purpose-built Tier 3 carrier neutral colocation campus.  With diverse routes from NJFX to multiple US locations across its 150,000 mile fiber network, Windstream helps carriers meet high bandwidth demands and reinforce their existing network architectures with expanded connectivity options. Through NJFX’s cable landing station campus, Windstream enables reliable and secure routes from New Jersey down the coast to Miami.

In addition, wholesale, carrier and enterprise customers can efficiently transport traffic with Windstream’s NEW strategic west coast locations including:

  • One Wilshire, Los Angeles, CA
  • 55 Market Street, San Jose, CA
  • 9/11 Great Oaks, San Jose, CA
  • 529 Bryant Street, Palo Alto, CA
  • 7135 S. Decatur, Las Vegas, NV
  • 1 Super Loop Way, Reno, NV
  • 120 E. Van Buren Street, Phoenix, AZ
  • 200 S 10th Street, McAllen, TX

These locations serve as international gateways for Windstream clients to reach LATAM and AsiaPac as well as points in between. Through its presence at NJFX, Windstream clients can also gain direct access to five independent subsea cable systems including TGN1, TGN2, and Seabras, with WALL-LI and AEC2 coming online in 2019. All of these enable interconnection to North America, Europe, South America, and the Caribbean.

Carriers, service providers and enterprises can leverage Windstream’s robust connectivity options including:

Wavelengths – dedicated point to point connectivity:

  • Speeds ranging from 1G up to 100G
  • Highly resilient connectivity, ideal for long distances
  • Low latency routes in 50+ markets in the US
  • Limitless scale
  • Enables enterprises to adopt carrier-grade services

E-line services – offers a variety of voice, data and cloud services delivered over highly-reliable Ethernet connections:

·    Speeds up to 1G
·    99.99% uptime SLA
·    Quickly transfer large files
·    Easily add bandwidth

·    Delivers high performance

The solid partnership we’ve built with NJFX – with its industry-leading facility providing a prime meeting hub connecting three continents (the United States, Europe and South America) – strongly supports and aligns with our international strategy of serving global customers seeking connectivity in the U.S,” states Joe Scattareggia Executive Vice President, Windstream Wholesale. “The NJFX team has consistently proven to be a valuable partner, serving their core customers with quick and reliable installs that enable Windstream to then build out networks across the country for those same customers, supporting their expansion and growth. As we continue to build into strategic landing stations across the country, we will also be adding new express routes from NJFX. The flexibility, creativity and innovation of the NJFX team has been exceptional and we look forward continuing this successful partnership.”

Built for flexibility and resiliency, NJFX’s 64,800 square foot facility offers high and low-density colocation solutions and 24/7 on-site security as well as CAT-5 hurricane resistant infrastructure. The site also offers onsite generators with fuel for up to five days of uninterrupted emergency service. NJFX collaborates closely with its carrier partners like Windstream to ensure the availability of diverse and high-performance infrastructure.

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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.

Windstream Boosts Connectivity Coast to Coast Read More »

How is the subsea cable boom transforming global data flows?

How is the subsea cable boom transforming global data flows?

Cloud services, video streaming and gaming are driving the flourishing submarine cable industry.

See the original article by Ellen Tannam at SiliconRepublic.

July 22, 2022

As the world becomes even more intricately connected than ever before, some serious infrastructural work is underway to keep up with the public demand, the volume of connected devices and the advent of enterprise cloud systems. Subsea cables are a massive piece of this puzzle.

Siliconrepublic.com spoke with NJFX CEO Gil Santaliz about the future of connectivity.

How long do you foresee the subsea cable building boom lasting?

The last refresh of subsea cables happened about two decades ago. As those cables near their end of life, this building boom is underway. We expect the build-out to focus not only on necessity of connectivity and capacity, but how that relates to security as well.

The new cables will create security by creating redundant routes – if one path goes down, another one is still available. Also, having secure and resilient facilities where these cables land is increasingly important. Specifically in the transatlantic, we expect potentially two more cables, which would bring the number to five, replacing the existing 11 in various stages of retirement.

What other drivers besides cloud are fuelling this current spike in building?

The biggest change we’ve seen in the current building boom is the structure of the financing. OTTs [over-the-top applications] such as Facebook and Google are helping to fund these very expensive projects. Many of them include a consortium model, with major OTTs as part of the funding group.

I think the reason for this is that content requiring more bandwidth than ever before makes up most of the traffic on these cables – I’m referring to video for the most part, but also gaming, live streaming and other applications like that.

Data demand for these apps, particularly from smartphones, is fuelling this. Before, we were sending just text, now it’s graphics, photos, video or even live video. Its real-time content, virtual reality and AI.

What innovations in the space have enabled projects to be completed quickly?

The funding coming from OTTs is helping more cables become ready for service in the second half of this decade than I think anyone expected, plus the ships have steady work, allowing them to ramp up their deployments.

What positives will the world see in the next five years due to subsea infrastructure?

You’re going to see applications, maybe some which may be invented in the United States and used in other parts of the world. You can even test or try things that are not in the geographical location you are in.

We are all going to be connected all the time, everywhere – collaboration in medicine, engineering, research, news and entertainment.

Is the current rate of manufacturing sustainable?

The most recent boom in subsea cable construction is notable for its geographic scope. The new subsea cables help create a redundancy with routes that we have not yet seen. Latin America has made significant investment in new cables.

Most routes around the globe are getting an upgrade with new cables, plus we are seeing new routes and new cables to connect places that were not before.

Shorter cables will continue in growth as a better, more reliable way to interconnect, such as the NJFX routes to Long Island and Boca. Perhaps some older systems with some time still left will want to move to carrier-neutral campuses.

Why do cables beat satellites in terms of connectivity?

Today, 99pc of international communications touch a subsea cable. Satellites are more expensive and more susceptible to disruption (weather etc).

What exactly is colocation and what are the business benefits?

Colocation refers to the landing station and the delivery systems being at the same spot. For example, at NJFX, we provide our customers the ability to choose how they interconnect domestic networks with international subsea systems.

The union of cable systems and data centres brings connectivity right to the edge, reducing latency. Colocation is also a plus if the location is not a traditional choke point, like Manhattan for example. Being located outside traditional congestion points is beneficial for route diversity.

This also helps with new connectivity solutions for carriers. We are reducing legacy points of failure by allowing an open marketplace where subsea cables actually land in the US.

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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

7 QUESTIONS WITH GIL SANTALIZ

7 QUESTIONS WITH GIL SANTALIZ Talking Technology Trends with NJFX’s CEO As Featured in SUBMARINE TELECOMS FORUM (Issue 122 January 2022) Gil Santaliz CEO January

Read More »

How is the subsea cable boom transforming global data flows? Read More »

Aqua Comms’ Digital Bridge: Providing Unique Infrastructure for Carriers

Aqua Comms’ Digital Bridge: Providing Unique Infrastructure for Carriers

July 2, 2018

Cisco Global 2020 Forecast predicts global Internet traffic will be 5.3 exabytes a day in less than two years. By 2020, global internet traffic will equal 484 billion DVDs running each year, 40 billion DVDs each month, or 55 million DVDs per hour. In 2020, the gigabyte equivalent of all the movies ever made will cross the Internet every two minutes.

This anticipated growth is staggering. The industry is addressing this growth through new subsea cables, which will serve as the infrastructure to carry all of this traffic. Let’s take a closer look at one such subsea cable operator, Aqua Comms DAC. A new era of cable building on the Atlantic was marked with the launch of Aqua Comms’ America-Europe Connect 1 (AEConnect -1) cable, which runs from Shirley, New York, to Killala, County Mayo, in the far western reaches of Ireland. Designed for resilience, the cable has dual, diverse backhauls through Dublin and then travels on to London.

Nigel Bayliff, CEO for Aqua Comms and a longtime industry leader, commented, “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, 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.

Older cable systems typically have a technical life of about 25 years and according to Bayliff, there are many reasons why these cables will start retiring and new cable systems will replace them.

“When economic opportunity came along for Aqua Comms, we jumped on it and worked with partners such as Facebook, Google, and Bulk,” commented Bayliff. “OTTs have massive requirements between a couple of points across an ocean and are leveraging private network links – not public telecom networks.”

As Bayliff explained, these OTT providers are now taking advantage of ownership grade economics since the technology now allows them to increase the capacity on the fiber pair.

In demonstration of that new model, Aqua Comms announced earlier this year that it is part of the consortium of the new HAVFRUE cable system, which traverses the North Atlantic to connect mainland Northern Europe to the U.S. Aqua Comms is the appointed system operator and landing party in the U.S., Ireland, and Denmark, and the company will market and sell capacity services and raw spectrum on its portion of the HAVFRUE cable system under the brand name America Europe Connect-2 (AEC-2).

AEC-2 infrastructure network services will be delivered to and from NJFX’s Tier 3 carrier-neutral colocation facility, in Wall, New Jersey, and 1025Connect in Westbury, New York, on Long Island. Bypassing the typical telecom route which often goes through New York City, this offers added network diversity and resiliency.

Addressing Innovation

When the latest upgrade of cable systems was completed nearly 20 years ago, smartphones barely existed. It is important for bandwidth players to have enough redundancy built across these cable systems to support their massive bandwidth needs.

Just one example is Facebook Live, which broadcasts content immediately so that someone who wants to share their child’s birthday party with a loved one on another continent can do so in real time. The live nature of the traffic requires bandwidth paths that can carry that content quickly and reliably. There are millions of users across the globe who need enormous amounts of live capacity.

In contrast, Netflix doesn’t necessarily need to run a fiber pair across the Atlantic because the content goes out to many caches first. So whether a user is seeking connectivity to support Facetime, making a What’s App video or getting sights, smells and sounds from an Augmented Virtual Reality application, much more bandwidth is required. Even if the application requires a minute amount of data, the data must flow constantly in order for the application to work properly.

“The industry is at a critical and very interesting juncture,” commented Gil Santaliz, the Founder and CEO of NJFX.  “NJFX serves as a physical North American subsea communication hub for subsea cables from South America and Europe. Our location at the Cable Landing Stations is a win for carriers, OTTs, and service providers who need a carrier-neutral interconnection point. Not only can they reduce costs but create economies of scale – all which pave the way for even more growth and innovation.”

Innovative providers like Aqua Comms look where there are private cables and bring together more value to deliver a conjoined solution. As Bayliff commented, the company is “very good at building cables and doesn’t want to be all things to all people. We are seeking to be the best that we can be.”

As a true carriers’ carrier, Aqua Comms doesn’t sell to enterprises or end-users. “We sell to carriers, ISPs and content providers,” Bayliff added, “all with a very focused and experienced senior-level team.”

Additional coverage of this story available Here.

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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.

Aqua Comms’ Digital Bridge: Providing Unique Infrastructure for Carriers Read More »

New Route for Caribbean Traffic Brings Greater Resiliency

New Route for Caribbean Traffic Brings Greater Resiliency

See the original article at SubCableWorld

June 22, 2018

Editor’s Note: As we have learned over the years, telecom networks face many threats – from natural disasters to backhoes to fishing boats.  The telecom industry has responded by making networks more diverse and resilient.  But the challenges continue.  Storms are becoming stronger, capable of doing an unprecedented amount of damage.  How do you prepare for the next one when it might be stronger than any previous storm? 

The submarine cable industry is responding with innovative new concepts.  Learning from each outage, the industry has for years been building more resiliency into their networks – coming up with more secure ways to move traffic. 

The 2017 hurricane season was the costliest in history, with Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria devastating large parts of the Caribbean and Gulf Coast.  With the 2018 season beginning, it is worth reflecting on what happened last year and how the industry is responding. 

With this in mind, we recently spoke with Felix Seda General Manager, NJFX, and Jose Casillas, General Manager, PREPA, Networks about a new service that their companies, along with Telecom Italia, are offering that provides an all-wet route from NJFX’s cable landing facilities in New Jersey to the Caribbean, while bypassing Miami. 

Felix Seda: NJFX operates “Tier 3 by the Subsea,” the world’s first colocation campus that strategically intersects a carrier neutral subsea cable landing station meet-me room with a Tier 3, carrier neutral data center. The 64,800-square foot purpose-built data center offers direct access to multiple independent subsea cable systems that interconnect North America, Europe, and South America. High and low-density colocation solutions are available with 24/7 support as well as unique US fiber back-haul solutions that avoid traditional legacy network points of failure. NJFX’s offerings provide the flexibility, reliability and security that global carriers, content providers, enterprise and government entities require to drive revenue, reduce expenses and improve service quality.

TI Sparkle is currently a customer of NJFX.  They were already providing access down to Brazil via their Seabras-1 cable capacity out of NJFX.  What we are focusing on now is that they are providing a new route from NJFX that bypasses Miami and goes down to the Caribbean.  The wet route that avoids the legacy terrestrial routes that have historically been located in the hurricane zones around Miami.  As we all know, we have been ravaged by Mother Nature with hurricanes in the Caribbean and the Miami area.  Sparkle has solved a problem that has been plaguing the industry for a number of years with this new diverse wet route going all the way down to the Caribbean, bypassing Miami and New York, both legacy choke points and Miami being a hurricane zone.

This is a complete diverse wet route that bypasses all of that legacy terrestrial infrastructure.  We are getting a lot of positive feedback just from initial conversations.  It has completely solved an issue that has been plaguing the industry for years in terms of getting down into the Caribbean whether it be from the United States, Europe, or even Canada.  We have a number of customers coming down from Canada and Europe –banks and other high-traffic users – that have traffic going down to the Caribbean and this new route will definitely help them to provide diversity and strengthen their network.

It can serve as a redundant, diverse, backup route to those customers down to the Caribbean but it also can be a primary route for anyone else who has a need for reliable communications to that region.

In terms of traffic, we’re seeing an increase of capacity in general and to the Caribbean in particular.  The subsea cables are much safer in terms of avoiding issues that the terrestrial routes tend to be plagued with.

We are very optimistic about this service for the future.  It is something that customers have been asking for.  The route down to the Caribbean and Latin America has been a highly popular route in recent times and what TI Sparkle is doing is basically innovating a solution to the problem that nobody else has been able to do so far.

Jose Casillas: PREPA Networks is an infrastructure provider in the Caribbean.  It is a wholesale telecommunications company.  We are based in Puerto Rico where we have our main facilities.  We provide telecom infrastructure to carriers in the region.  We also provide connectivity to leading carriers from the states to Puerto Rico and throughout the Caribbean.  Within Puerto Rico, we provide cable landing services for many of the international submarine cables that connect the island to the rest of the United States, as well as the Caribbean, South America and ultimately throughout the world.

We are a facilities provider for the carriers.  We do not provide retail services; only facilities.  We have one of the main cable landing stations in Puerto Rico, which is the most connected island in the region.  We provide connectivity and cable landing services to five of the international cables that connect Puerto Rico.

During the 2017 hurricane season, most of the cable stations remained operational through Hurricane Maria, which devastated Puerto Rico.  Only one of the stations, operated by another company, was down at all.  It was flooded and had to be evacuated until they had everything under control and then they were able to bring the station back online.  Other than that, all of the cable stations performed as expected; before, during and after the storm.

Puerto Rico, as an island, is limited in terms of access to resources after an event.  That is something that you plan for but there is no substitute for real-life experience.  So once Maria went over, all of the essential transportation systems – airports, roads, everything — was closed.  Nothing was working.  On top of that, there was no telecommunications.  Most of the other sites in the states or in other countries have large highways networks or other ways of transporting goods.  But we can only get vital goods to the island by air or sea.

So we had no access to fuel.  We had plans where our facilities could stand for 15-20 days without fuel, but at the time that you design these facilities nobody says “well we will be without fuel for so many days.”  Once you are in the emergency, you run into unexpected problems.  In our case to convince the federal government to start releasing the fuel to essential facilities like a submarine cable landing station.  So you learn about things that you have to take into consideration for the future.  Like adding additional fuel capacity for longer periods of an event.

In the case or Maria, we were able to solve the problem within seven days.  We were able to talk to the federal officials and access a fuel line through the port and were able to deliver the fuel to our facilities and then we had no problem.  We ran the facilities for 42 days on generators until the power utilities were up and running again.  Fuel is a major resource that we have to plan for in the future.

Once you are in an unprecedented event, you start finding new things that you did consider during the design.  We could not anticipate it to be as harsh as it was – nothing like this had ever happened before.  But you learn. And you find ways to improve that facility to provide more resiliency.  I believe that we will learn from this event.  We learned that we need access to fuel for longer terms.  Because we are an island, the logistics get very complicated.  It was a harsh test and we learned from it.

We have been working with NJFX to come up with a way of bypassing Miami and providing an alternative route for connectivity to the Caribbean.  One of the goals when we started the HUB787 project back in 2010 was to establish a facility that could be used to provide bypass.  HUB787 is a division of PREPA Networks.  It is an interconnection and peering center for the Caribbean, with a Tier 3 data center and an ultra-modern submarine cable station.  Last year we were able to work with NJFX, which resulted in TI Sparkle agreeing to extend their submarine cable connectivity into HUB787.  So now we can provide a bypass around the Miami site for traffic from the mainland to Puerto Rico, throughout the Caribbean and down to South America.  In terms of robustness and resiliency, if you have any problems going through Miami, you can migrate your traffic directly from NJFX to HUB787 through TI Sparkle facilities and you will still have connectivity to New York City, which most of our finest customers here request.  And also the NJFX facility provides access to Europe through the transatlantic cables that land there.

So this is something that is new for the region that you have an option that you can collocate, use as your computing facility, or use as your bypass facility in case there is a disaster event that disrupts your connectivity to Miami.

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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.

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