Access: The term Access has several meanings, but generally refers to a physical circuit connecting last mile locations; most typically, a user’s end-location(s) to a carrier(s).
Core180 understands that Access is a driven by proximity and choice and has created a method that leverages the competition of hundreds of carriers for our users.Bandwidth: Identifies the capacity of a single connection by measuring its maximum speed within one-second increments; the larger the bandwidth, the more capacity and the higher the cost. The table below is a comparison at just how fast is ‘fast’.
Core180 offers bandwidth from T1 to OC192.Bandwidth Table:
| Connection | Speed | Difference |
| T1, DS-1 | 1.544 Mbps | Baseline |
| T3, DS-3 | 44.736 Mbps | 2,798% faster |
| OC-3 | 155.520 Mbps | 9,973% faster |
| OC-12 | 622.080 Mbps | 40,191% faster |
| OC-48 | 2.488 Gbps | 161,040% faster |
| OC-192 | 10 Gbps | 647,569% faster |
Definition of Units of Measurement
bit= smallest unit of digital information, i.e. ones & zeros
byte= a set of bits
bps= bits per second
Kbps= kilobits per second =1000 bits per second
Mbps = Million bits per second =1,000,000 bits per second
Gbps = Gigabits per second = 1,000,000,000 (one billion) bits per second
Tbps = Terabits per second = 1,000,000,000,000 (one trillion) bits per second
Carrier: A provider of many telecom services and solutions. They may be metropolitan, regional or global and typically offer physical circuits and branded services that are transported over them.
Core180 intersects with hundreds of carriers identified by speed, value and services offered. We maintain carrier neutrality, allowing our users to select the best of breed in carrier networks.Carrier Hotel: After deregulation, the telecommunication wholesale market was partitioned, effecting the long haul, last mile and service sectors of the business. This breakup created thousands of new entrants into the arena that fueled opportunities for new types of data centers who valued network proximity in addition to standard environmental services such as space, power and cooling. These locations, branded ‘Carrier Hotels’, promote the notion that services and networking solutions must operate collectively. Carrier hotels, typically owned and operated by real estate backed firms, are ‘network neutral’, and provide the flexibility for any single buyer to connect to any single seller. These facilities allow carriers to reduce the number of access connections required to reach networking partners
Core180 interconnects with the hundreds of carrier networks within carrier hotels creating the largest platform of its kind.Carrier Neutral: The ability to choose from among the best solutions without being constrained by any single network and having no preference for one provider over another.
Core180 is 100% carrier-neutral offering users the most network options available.Carrier Nodes: Carrier Nodes are best described as network switching equipment; they may also be referred to as a point-of-presence (POP), which is a component of a network backbone. Carrier Nodes may or may not reside in a carrier hotel.
Circuit: A physical connection spanning two or more locations. Circuits are available in many bandwidths and usually connect a customer to a carrier(s) network. As a rule of thumb, a circuit is the physical connection while ‘bandwidth’ is the capacity it is capable of.
Core180’s access agreements with global, national and metro market providers has made us the most competitive circuit solution provider in North AmericaLast-Mile Access: Last Mile Access or simply ‘Last Mile’ is the physical connection between the user’s location and a local carrier. Also referred to as Access, Circuit, or a Local Loop (also see ‘Access’).
Meet-Me-Room: Passive, common areas within Carrier Hotels where physical interconnections of every speed and media type are supported between buyers and sellers.
Core180 eliminates the dependency of a single network provider, allowing customers to choose their own networks from within the Meet-Me-Room, providing choice, flexibility, lower costs and significant reduced time to market.Non-Facility based carrier: A network provider that does not operate a network of their own, and instead resells the circuits and services they offer from other providers without capital costs. Also referred to as ‘resellers’.
On-Net Building: A building where one or more carrier(s) has extended to, and incorporated onto their network. Depending on multiple factors including proximity to a carrier’s equipment and tenant demographics, a building may be on-net to many or very few carriers.
Core180’s innovative design puts our user’s immediate ‘on-net’ to all carriers in the area, even when your building is not.Network Access: Depending on the application, this is the ability to access either the PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network) or the ‘Internet Cloud’. Network Access options vary widely by location and market.
Core180 is built from within the carrier model and offers its users the most direct network access options regardless of location.Service Provider: A carrier (LEC, IXC, ISP, ASP) offering both physical transport and varied, branded services.
With one deployment to Core180, users have access to a wealth of regional, national and global service providers providing scalability, network and route diversity.Telecommunications Network Integrator (TNI): Leveraging the flexibility and control of the carrier hotel model while incorporating the operational efficiencies of a carrier operator, a TNI bridges the gap within and between carrier networks. They offer optimal, collective solutions beyond the scope, and dependency of any single network.
Core180’s network neutral platform was designed for its users to extend their network, enhancing their ability to procure both access and service offerings. The platform is distributed into carrier hotels where Core180 connects to a diverse range of providers at high bandwidth capacities. We offer our users a carrier grade point-of-presence (POP) in the wholesale carrier marketplace without the capital costs or responsibilities of maintaining any equipment.
Tier 1, 2, and 3 Markets:A categorization of metropolitan areas by tiers using population density as the benchmark. In the US, cities with populations over three-million are considered Tier 1; between one and three million are Tier 2 and between one-half and one million are considered Tier 3.
Core180’s proprietary platform is built into Tier 1, 2 and 3 cities allowing for muxing, demuxing, and hubbing regardless of where your network requirements are.
