DC BLOX Connects Atlanta and Chattanooga Edge Computing Data Centers
Fiber optic network offers unprecedented connectivity and disaster recovery service options
ATLANTA, Feb. 15, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- DC BLOX has completed the latest phase of its fiber optic network installation between its data centers in Atlanta and Chattanooga with network connectivity to 56 Marietta St. DC BLOX is a leading provider of interconnected edge computing data centers and carrier class network service.
DC BLOX's fiber optic infrastructure is an 8.8 Tb per second network. The new capacity provides customers at both data centers with lightning fast, low-latency connectivity with geo-redundant paths and links them to the Southeast's largest Internet Exchange (IX).
"The goal for the network at DC BLOX is to create a distributed data center environment for our customers," said Jeff Wabik, chief network and strategy officer at DC BLOX. "That means that the connectivity between all our data centers is so fast and abundant that applications can be distributed across them with minimal concern for latency and performance impacts."
The Atlanta and Chattanooga data centers are an effective disaster recovery pair. With more than 100 miles between them, they meet a best practice for geographic diversity for potential natural disasters – if something happens in one location, the data is secure in a backup location.
DC BLOX's 100 Gb per second connections from its Atlanta and Chattanooga data centers to the facility at 56 Marietta St. enable connectivity to more than 150 network, telecom and cloud providers. For customers who cannot acquire space at this major U.S. interconnection point because of its high occupancy, DC BLOX provides near-site colocation services.
Average latency between DC BLOX's Atlanta data center and the 56 Marietta St. location is 0.103 milliseconds, and Atlanta to Chattanooga is only 1.71 milliseconds.
DC BLOX colocation customers can purchase Ethernet Private Line (EPL) and Ethernet LAN (ELAN) services connecting them to other DC BLOX data centers, to premise-based locations and to cloud providers using DC BLOX's soon-to-be-available Cloud Ramp service.
The DC BLOX wholly owned fiber network uses Ciena's converged packet optical and packet networking products to provide fully protected redundant routes with unprecedented scale and performance. Ciena's 6500 and 8700 platforms add greater network automation, control and service delivery for customers in the southeastern United States.
"DC BLOX is creating the next generation of software-defined data centers, bringing huge improvements in scale and responsiveness for latency sensitive enterprise applications," said Bruce Hembree, vice president and general manager of North America sales at Ciena. "DC BLOX's vision will change the paradigm for customers harnessing the capabilities of multi-cloud environments and bringing self-serve, on-demand resources that will adapt to the real-time needs of enterprise, research and education applications."
DC BLOX plans to extend its data center footprint into Huntsville and Birmingham, Ala. in 2018 and will provide high-speed network connectivity with the Atlanta and Chattanooga locations.
About DC BLOX
DC BLOX brings hyperscale efficiency, carrier-grade connectivity and cloud flexibility to an agile, multi-tenant data center footprint. DC BLOX Edge-enabled data centers provide customers with the ability to securely backup, transfer, restore and synchronize data at light speed. With locations in Atlanta and Chattanooga, Tenn., the company recently announced the construction of another interconnected data center in Huntsville, Ala., and plans to build three more in underserved markets throughout the Southeast by the end of 2018.
For more information, please visit www.dcblox.com or call at 877-589-1684.
Follow on Twitter @DCBLOXinc
Follow on LinkedIn www.linkedin.com/company/dcblox-inc-/
Follow on Google+
Follow on Facebook @dcBLOXinc
SOURCE DC BLOX
WANT YOUR COMPANY'S NEWS FEATURED ON PRNEWSWIRE.COM?
Newsrooms &
Influencers
Digital Media
Outlets
Journalists
Opted In
Share this article