The transmission of large data files (typically those in the megabyte and greater size range) or large quantities of smaller data blocks between two remote locations has traditionally been accomplished in one of three ways: (1) physically transporting the data on a tangible media such a magnetic tape, floppy or floptical disks, or optical discs (referred to as a "sneaker net"), (2) electronic transmission via modem and public telecommunications lines, or (3) transmission in the electronic domain via a dedicated transmission pathway consisting of one or more hard wire, fiber optic, microwave, or satellite linkages.
The need to send huge data files between remote locations has continued to expand in many industries, such as photographic and pre-press operations, magazine and catalog printing, medical imaging, CAD/CAM fabrication and manufacturing, financial and accounting services, and many scientific and technical research operations.
Physical transportation of data is restricted by the size of large data files and the capacity of transportable media. Floppy and floptical disk media is currently a preferred avenue due to the relatively small cost of the media per megabyte of storage capacity. Conventional high-density floppy disks having approximately 1.44 megabytes of formatted uncompressed capacity have been replaced by various high-capacity options such as the 100 megabyte Iomega.RTM. ZIP.TM. or Syquest.RTM. drives, and the recently introduced 120 megabyte LS-120.TM. floppy disk from 3M Company that is backwards compatible with the prevailing 1.44 megabyte formats. Even greater capacity may be obtained using magneto-optical disks such as the 230 megabyte DynaMO.RTM. format from Fujitsu, WORM and rewritable optical discs such as the industry-standard 650 megabyte CD-ROMs, and various removable hard drives.
However, even with increasing storage capacity and lowered equipment prices, physical transportation of data has many inherent drawbacks. Besides the cost of media, there are additional monetary costs for the actual physical transportation, including packaging, postal, messenger, or courier charges, and the time and expense involved with having personnel download, address, deliver, receive, and subsequently load the data. If the data is processed at the remote location and returned, the costs are doubled.
Utilizing overnight or same-day couriers, a round-trip shipment between two geographically remote locations (i.e., beyond the boundary of a single metropolitan region) will still require one or two days in transit.
Finally, there are the inherent risks of data loss or corruption due to defective media, mishandling, environmental conditions, and routing errors. Attempting to prevent such problems requires protective packaging, redundant shipments, and other safeguards that are expensive, time consuming, and yet unreliable. Even with safeguards in place, lost media or corrupted data can result in days of lost time in transit, as well as consuming valuable personnel time and creating uncertainty regarding the status of a given project or operation.
A variety of electronic data transmission systems exist for transmitting data files between two spatially-distinct locations. Local-area networks (LANs) are generally regarded as optimal for connecting a plurality of personal computers together within a single facility or campus using a file server or mainframe system as the backbone, and some LANs use dedicated transmission pathways to extend beyond a defined facility's or campus' geographical boundaries. Wide-area networks (WANs) are generally utilized for connections between more distant locations, and may be used to interconnect separate LANs. In the case of both LANs and WANs, there is usually a network connection between local computers using low speed hard wired or infrared pathways, and dedicated high speed connections between distant locations or with shared peripherals and systems maintenance devices.
While dedicated LANs or WANs will serve the needs for data transmission within a homogeneous autonomous enterprise--such as a single company having several plants or a university with more than one campus--they have proven unsuitable for conveying data between heterogeneous enterprises such as service providers and their customers.
Data transmission via conventional multiplexed telecommunications pathways is too slow to be useful for large data files even when compressed. Data errors, verification schemes, and encryption protocols all complicate such systems. Shared public networks are similarly too slow and unwieldy for sustained use in most industries requiring rapid shipping of large and complex data files, particularly where security and data integrity are primary concerns.
Private WANs are one feasible solution, but are frequently too expensive given the moderate transmission volumes that many companies require. In addition, one company may require frequent transmission connections to a plurality of unrelated senders or recipients at remote sites each having a different LAN structure and protocol, as well as infrequent or "one time" nonrecurring transmission connections to many other unrelated sites.
The use of commercial WANs can sometimes overcome these problems for companies having high volume or recurring transmission needs with unrelated sites, but these can be quite complex and expensive, requiring on-premises equipment, leased transmission pathways, technical support, maintenance, and custom-developed software applications.