• @[email protected]
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    916 hours ago

    Ironically, page won’t load for me.

    How is it a switch if there’s no data processing? There needs to be a MAC table and the switch needs to send non-broadcast frames only to the right port. I don’t see how it can have that intelligence without converting light to electricity and processing it.

    And I’d take it that would mean no SFPs, which means not a very flexible device if all the ports are LC with a fixed wavelength and signal.

    • @kurwa
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      2516 hours ago

      Someone please correct me if I’m wrong, but I don’t think this article is talking about a network switch, I think it’s talking about a logic gate switch.

      • @Womble
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        16 hours ago

        It is, it confused me too. It is refering to an optical only on/off switch which can also be used as an xor gate. Many levels down from a network switch.

    • @dhork
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      16 hours ago

      There are such things as L1 switches, they are not really switches in the Ethernet sense but rather more like crossbar switches. They can selectively connect all traffic from two arbitrary ports together, and then change that on the fly, without a wiring change. Applications that are obsessed with getting the lowest possible latency might opt for those.

  • @_Atlas_
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    115 hours ago

    How long do we thing before things like this are implemented at a larger ISP scale?

    • @tekato
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      314 hours ago

      ISPs have nothing to do with what the article talks about, this is about logical gates. Anyways, this tech sounds like a research toy to secure some grants for the laboratory.

    • @Squizzy
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      114 hours ago

      Soon. In the US probaly not soon though, you guys shafted on consumer utilities.