JellyDigital

Cross-border · DIA

Cross-border Dedicated Internet Access — 1 Gbps to 100 Gbps.

Dedicated, SLA-backed internet from Jelly Digital — delivered across Tijuana, Playas, and surrounding Baja California metros on three physically diverse routes. 1 Gbps to 100 Gbps, clean BGP transit with IPv4 and IPv6, low-latency reach to major Los Angeles IXs, and immediate-to-short turn-up.

Dedicated Internet Access — real committed bandwidth, symmetric upload and download, a clean SLA, and no shared-tenancy congestion. We deliver DIA across Tijuana, Playas de Tijuana, and surrounding Baja California metros via our cross-border backbone, with low-latency paths to major Los Angeles internet exchange points including Equinix LA and One Wilshire. Capacity from 1 Gbps to 100 Gbps is pre-provisioned on our three diverse routes and can be turned up in days to weeks.

Capacity

1–100 Gbps

Symmetric

Yes

Upload = download

Routes

3 diverse

Turn-up

Days–weeks

What comes with a Jelly DIA circuit

Clean BGP transit

Full Internet routing table delivered via BGP on redundant sessions. Bring your own ASN and prefix space, or use Jelly-provided address blocks.

IPv4 and IPv6

Dual-stack standard. IPv4 address allocations are provided (subject to availability) or you can announce your own; IPv6 is included on every circuit.

SLA with credits

Uptime, latency, packet-loss, and repair-time commitments in writing with service credits for misses. Specifics are part of the contract and tuned to your circuit size and criticality.

Low-latency LA reach

Routed via our backbone through the San Ysidro POP to major Los Angeles internet exchange points — Equinix LA, PAIX, One Wilshire — delivering Baja origination onto US peering in the shortest practical distance.

DDoS protection options

Optional upstream DDoS mitigation including rate-limiting, scrubbing-center redirection, and BGP flowspec for customers who want managed protection rather than doing their own edge filtering.

Burstable + committed structures

Choose flat-rate billing or burstable (CIR + bursting on 95th-percentile measurement). Flexible for customers with spiky traffic patterns or predictable steady-state.

Who buys our cross-border DIA

Mexican tech and commerce companies

Baja-headquartered operators whose customers and cloud resources are in the US — they need high-quality US internet delivered at their Mexican site, not a roundabout path through a regional carrier.

Call centers and BPOs in Baja

Voice and video traffic that's extremely sensitive to jitter and loss. Symmetric upload and a committed SLA turn "the internet is slow" complaints into a non-issue.

CDN and content caches

Edge nodes serving US audiences from Baja-hosted infrastructure — cache fill from US origins is far more efficient on a direct cross-border DIA than on regional cellular or last-mile internet.

Maquiladoras + enterprise branches

Manufacturing plants and branch offices whose workforces live in Mexican cloud tools and ERP systems hosted in US data centers. DIA is often paired with MPLS for corporate traffic.

DIA FAQ

What's the difference between your DIA and broadband internet?

DIA is a committed, dedicated connection — you get the full bandwidth you paid for all the time, with a signed SLA and service credits if we miss. Broadband is shared capacity with best-effort performance. For enterprise workloads, voice, video, or any service with real SLAs downstream, DIA is the right product.

Can I get DIA dual-homed across two of your diverse routes?

Yes. Dual-homed configurations are common — one circuit on our Tijuana Centro route and a second on Playas or our expansion path, with BGP failover between them. Documented physical diversity available for compliance use cases.

What IXs do you peer with for LA-bound traffic?

We hand off to major Los Angeles exchange points including Equinix LA, PAIX, and One Wilshire. Specific peering choices are tuned to the circuit's traffic profile during commissioning.

What's typical one-way latency from Tijuana to One Wilshire?

Latency depends on exact endpoints and routing, but our Baja-to-One-Wilshire path is on the order of what you'd expect for a direct fiber run between those cities — not a winding path through third-party carriers. We'll share measured figures during scoping.

Can I upgrade capacity later without re-contracting?

Usually yes. Circuit handoffs are typically 10GE or 100GE optics, and bumping committed capacity within that interface is a configuration change. Stepping up interface speeds (say 10GE to 100GE) is a larger change but often possible without full recontract — we structure this case-by-case.

Prefer to own the glass?

Dark fiber →

Unlit pairs crossing the border — you bring the optics.

Private transport, not internet?

Lit wavelengths →

10/100/400G managed wavelengths between endpoints.

Multi-site WAN?

MPLS →

L2/L3 VPN with QoS, connecting both sides of the border.

Tell us the size and we'll move fast.

Capacity, endpoints, diversity requirements, and whether you need IPv4 allocations — and we can usually come back with a turn-up date the same week.

Updated