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Some of high tech’s biggest names – Microsoft, HP and Intel among them – are starting to embrace a technology called network coding in an effort to boost throughput, scalability and efficiency of everything from content distribution to wireless networks.
Network coding, largely shrouded in university and vendor labs since it was proposed seven years ago by a handful of researchers, is essentially an algorithm that proponents say can potentially more than double network throughput while also improving reliability and resistance to attacks. Network coding’s most ardent supporters say the technology could spark networking’s next revolution, while others say network coding is more likely to quietly infiltrate network architectures based on existing routing schemes.
Network coding works by separating messages into smaller bits of “evidence” that can then be deduced by the destination node without transmitting, retransmitting or replicating the entire message. It enables this evidence to traverse multiple paths to and from intermediary nodes which then send it on to the endstation. It does not require additional capacity or routes – it simply mixes evidence of messages into bit streams already supported by an existing network infrastructure.
"It’s like eavesdropping: You listen to what’s going on around you, you form an opinion, and then you improve the overall throughput and capacity by actually remembering and using the information you have,” says Sumeet Sandhu, principal investigator for cooperative wireless communication at Intel Research.
Network coding could work its way into any number of products from routers to wireless systems or take the form of entirely new devices dubbed network coders. Intel sees the potential for the technology to extend the range of wireless base stations. Microsoft is already trialing network coding to make its content distribution system more efficient (read "Microsoft's network coding plan"). Other big network players, such as Cisco, are keeping their plans hush hush for now and declined to say more than this, through a spokesman: “We are investigating network coding as the theory helps distinguish a variety of different types of traffic, then prioritizes them to help increase the capacity of the network. Right now we do not offer any specific network coding products.”

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Comments (4)
MIT now has a short course on Network CodingBy Anonymous on December 20, 2007, 12:34 pmFor those looking for additional info on network coding, you may want to consider the new short course being offered at MIT. It is co-taught by Muriel Medard (quoted...
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Network Coding used for content distributionBy Micronet on December 10, 2007, 4:40 pmMicrosoft tested network coding for a content distribution system, used for a peer-to-peer network that distributed Microsoft Visual Studio 2008 Beta-2. The company...
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Revolution SmevolutionBy meatpieandtatters on December 10, 2007, 4:28 pmWhat Microsoft can't fix with all their application overhead and poor performance, let's come up with yet another layer of complexity which serves two purposes:...
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RE: Network coding: networking's next revolution?By PacketCop on December 10, 2007, 9:32 amSo I'm guessing they like it for UDP and multicast due to the doubling of errors as well as transmissions? On a link of poor quality every lost packet is two lost...
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