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Scott Pinkerton has more than 25 years of IT experience, including more than a dozen with Argonne National Laboratory, where he currently serves as network services manager. He manages Argonne’s core network infrastructure, the one with capacity of some 80Gbps.
Given his network credentials, it should raise a big yellow caution flag for would-be VoIP implementers everywhere to learn that Pinkerton’s first VoIP foray went exactly nowhere. After a trouble-plagued pilot, he was forced to rip out his VoIP phones and replace them with TDM models. What’s more, his was a greenfield VoIP implementation, not a TDM replacement, and the network in question was running only voice, not converged voice and data.
This is the rather sad tale that Pinkerton told to attendees at the recent Network World IT Roadmap Conference & Expo in Chicago. “I often feel there’s a little more learning to be had from the rollouts that didn’t just go like clockwork,” Pinkerton said in a follow-up interview. “It really forced us to dig into things quite a bit deeper than we would’ve if it were just plug and play.”
Located in Argonne, Ill., just south of Chicago, Argonne recently celebrated its 60th anniversary as a U.S. National Lab. It has a $475 million budget and about 2,900 employees, with more than 5,000 others who use its facilities throughout the year, conducting research on a range of technologies for the Department of Energy.
Argonne first looked at VoIP about two years ago, when it was replacing the main campus PBX. “Our confidence in VoIP wasn’t there,” at that time, Pinkerton said. But when a new building was going up to house Argonne’s Center for Nanoscale Materials, Pinkerton decided the time was right to try again, on a smaller scale.
The pilot project, which began around September 2006, involved 80 IP phones connected to three Cisco Catalyst 4500 switches and two 3560 switches. The Cisco switches, in turn, connected to a 10G Ethernet network core based on Systimax Solutions equipment.
Argonne installed the VoIP network on separate circuits from the building’s data network, which he said supported “a lot of oddball science,” including teraflop computing. “Our data networking is a little bit nontypical,” Pinkerton said. He expected that keeping the voice network separate would also simplify troubleshooting.
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Comments (20)
Never Trust Auto Speed-DuplexBy Anonymous on May 28, 2007, 9:47 amFirst full discloser- I work for Cisco. I don't want to say anything bad about a customer but one should never trust auto neg. IMHO the protocol is weak. Years ago...
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Reply to autonegotiateBy Anonymous on May 24, 2007, 3:28 pmFirst there are a number of excellent handsets out there that work quite well. Second I believe the gentleman was doing a pilot and in the process learned of some...
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Reply to the Cisco Kool Aid CrewBy Anonymous on May 24, 2007, 3:03 pmPerhaps you all should explore what Argonne does with their network. It might give you insight into why they didnt want to put VOIP on the production network. They...
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Autonegotiate didn't work properly?By Anonymous on May 24, 2007, 12:42 pmThis should not have been a great surprise to anyone with any real world experience. While auto is ok for most desktops and small printers there are documented problems...
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Cable Run..By Anonymous on May 24, 2007, 11:01 amWell, to that point (above), where there is a phone, there is generally a PC or a Data device either on the same desk, or nearby. So, why in the world would you...
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