Yes, you were right in burying the pipe. Fiber Optics Go the Last Mile By Charlotte Wolter New optical last-mile technologies, shown at the National Fiber Optics Engineering Conference (NFOEC) in Chicago in September, are looking to leverage the large reservoirs of dark fiber in metropolitan areas to create a new way to provide high-bandwidth access. These products use a dark fiber, or wavelengths, in a metro dense wavelength-division multiplexing (DWDM) system linked to passive opticals for the last mile, and they provision services with an intelligent switch in a central office (CO), location. Because the link between the CO and the customer premises is not a synchronous optical network (SONET), but native asynchronous transfer mode (ATM), services can be provisioned quickly and are highly scalable. According to market research firm Vertical Systems Group, Dedham, Mass., 76 percent of businesses in North America are within one mile of a fiber source. Sources of that fiber include dark fiber competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs), such as Metromedia Fiber Network Inc., White Plains, N.Y., regional Bell operating companies (RBOCs) and even digital loop carrier (DLC) links, which typically include several dark fibers. Adding to the availability of dark fiber is the September Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ruling requiring incumbent LECs (ILECs) to sell or lease their dark fiber plant to CLECs as unbundled network elements (UNEs). However, most businesses have not been able to take advantage of that resource because the cost of existing fiber technologies, such as SONET, can be justified in the last mile only if there is demand for very large bandwidth. An economical last-mile fiber technology enables CLECs to tap large multitenant buildings and business parks, says Jeff Gwynne, vice president of marketing, Quantum Bridge Communications Inc., North Andover, Mass. Quantum Bridge is planning to introduce products that combine a low-cost passive optical last mile with an "optical access switch" in a CO or headend, and an "intelligent optical terminal" at the end user's premises. The system uses ATM switching over the passive optics from the customer premises to the CO to aggregate traffic efficiently and provide quality of service (QoS). The customer premises equipment (CPE) has multiple interfaces, including 100BaseT Ethernet, T1 and ATM, and can take output from integrated access devices (IADs). Interfaces at the CO to the backbone include ATM over SONET, IP over SONET or gigabit Ethernet. Another startup, LuxN, Sunnyvale, Calif., provides what it calls "managed optical physical layer access." It also combines an intelligent CO device linked to CPE over low-cost fiber links, but concentrates intelligence in the CO. The CPE box is more like an optical channel service unit (CSU) with multiple ports, says Eugene Park, director of strategic marketing at LuxN. It will be available in single-user or multitenant configurations. Marconi Communications Inc., Irving, Texas, which recently acquired local loop company RelTec Corp., Cleveland, and ATM specialist Fore Systems Inc., Warrendale, Pa., has a consumer applications fiber-to-the-curb technology that builds on the company's experience in DLC. Called DISC*S (Digital Intelligent Subscriber Carrier System), the product brings fiber to a remote digital terminal, but then, unlike DLC, continues fiber to within 500 feet of a customer. Each local loop fiber serves an average of 7.5 homes and delivers 24 DS-0s, up to 750 megahertz (mHz) of video (the equivalent of 125 analog television channels or about 600 digital channels) and 10BaseT Ethernet data. Copyright ¸ 1999 by Virgo Publishing, Inc. <http://www.vpico.com/> Please read our legal page <http://www.vpico.com/legal.html> before using this site. |