LoRa networks will likely co-exist, not compete, with cellular IoT.
Last night I was going through some CCIE Routing and Switching VOD’s and found a statement I found interesting. Beyond the fact that I thought the content was far below the expert level (which is fine because a refresher or level-set is typically helpful), I believed it to be incorrect. The statement that was made is as follows:
“A neighbor meets the feasibility condition if the reported distance by the neighbor is the same as or smaller than the feasible distance of the router”
So what are my issues with this statement? First, I thought “feasible distance of the router” is ambiguous and could be assumed to be the advertised distance or the reported distance which is basically the feasible distance of the neighboring router. However, that was not my main problem with the statement. My main concern with this statement is that I have always learned that the feasibility condition is only met if the reported distance (RD) is strictly less than the feasible distance of the local route. So I set out to determine if I had a correct understanding or if the Feasibility Condition (FC) could really be met with a RD equal to the FD.
To test my theory, Continue reading
Cisco’s orchestrator uses YANG modeling from Tail-f.
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Ericsson will be sole infrastructure provider for transcontinental 5G network.