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Working On The Universal Appeal Of ADSL
By Kelly Jackson Higgins Universal ADSL (asymmetrical digital subscriber line) technology is touted as a way to pull information from the Internet at speeds of anywhere from 64 Kbps to 1.5 Mbps, and push at rates between 32 Kbps and 512 Kbps. Its promise is so great that major industry players have put their shoulders into the effort of bringing a standard to market through the new Universal ADSL Working Group, which is developing an ADSL "lite" standard that could bring "always on" Internet to a PC near you. Among Universal ADSL's supporters are Alcatel, Cisco Systems, Compaq Computer Corp., Ericsson Telecom, GTE Corp., Intel Corp., Lucent Technologies, MCI, Microsoft Corp., Northern Telecom, Rockwell Semiconductor Systems, Sprint, Texas Instruments, 3Com Corp. and all five regional Bells.
In an interview with Network Computing, John Cahill, co-chair of the Universal ADSL Working Group and executive director of BellSouth's advanced networking division, talks about the challenges and opportunities awaiting Universal ADSL, which will be based on the existing ANSI T1.413 specification, as well as BellSouth's strategy for rolling out ADSL services to consumers and businesses.
What is the significance of the mix of players who initiated the Universal ADSL Working Group? Compaq, Intel and Microsoft initiated meetings with the regional Bells to float this idea. To accelerate the ADSL market, we realized mutually that we needed players from both the PC industry and the telco service provider industry. Just the telcos or the PC companies couldn't make ADSL happen end to end. This is probably unprecedented. I was quite surprised at the enormous response we had from all of these players to define specifications and come up with an end-to-end solution. The recent history with ISDN and 56K [modem technology] was probably fresh enough in everyone's minds that they realized the benefits of this alliance and what it would take to pull this off. We see Universal ADSL as being complementary to and interoperable with the ANSI T1.413 standard, which is what the Joint Procurement Consortium [JPC] based its purchases on with Alcatel for full-rate ADSL.
Will you explain BellSouth's ADSL strategy? We've got a trial in Birmingham, Ala., with connections to multiple ISPs, including BellSouth.Net and www.isp, and we are evaluating products. We are introducing the latest versions of ADSL hardware and software that Alcatel is releasing in the next few months. We are evaluating our cost points, defining our service descriptions and developing a marketing plan for ADSL. We haven't finalized our deployment plans yet--we are trying to take into consideration where Universal ADSL is going. There ultimately will be two versions of ADSL--a consumer, mass-market ADSL (Universal ADSL) and a higher-speed, higher-quality-of-service and higher-priced, business-oriented ADSL service. There will be different classes of service, where you pay for value as you move up the chain.
What are some of the challenges in developing Universal ADSL? We need to decrease the power, speed and available throughput, with the ultimate goal being to reduce the need for a splitter device at the user site for voice and data traffic. I don't know if we can eliminate the splitter altogether. That depends on the inside wiring and, in some cases, the phone installed.
What has inhibited DSL deployment thus far? One thing is the cost of the CPE [customer premises equipment]--the modem the user needs to get connected. The other is the complexity of an ADSL service, which has inhibited mass deployments by telcos and other service providers. Now, when we go to install ADSL, we need to do a loop qualification [to make sure the lines are fit for ADSL].
With one common Universal ADSL standard all these manufacturers can use, modem prices can decrease. Then users can go to any retail store, buy an ADSL modem, plug it into their PC, call us up and say, "I'd like ADSL service." Then it's a matter of us doing a quick loop qualification and turning on the service.
What does Universal ADSL mean to the cable-modem market? We see cable providers as formidable competition. We want to target the existing copper facility as an alternative to cable modems for Internet access. And cable companies, too, have infrastructure issues, like deploying two-way capabilities and the fact that the cable infrastructure is based on shared bandwidth. The cable that goes by your house goes by thousands of other houses as opposed to ADSL, which is point-to-point.
Ultimately, that point-to-point feature will let traveling business users access their corporate LANs from home or the road through an ADSL connection. This telecommuting and remote-access market is key for Universal ADSL.
What role will ADSL play in helping regional Bells like BellSouth become major Internet service providers? It's important for the next technology step. We are already in the ISP business with BellSouth.Net. We see ADSL access becoming ubiquitous across our region, which may take three to four years to happen. And we are heavily committed to BellSouth.Net.
Will the Universal ADSL Working Group and ADSL Forum work together? There are a lot of the same members in each group. The ADSL Forum is addressing other issues, like end-to-end connectivity. I see the two groups working together very closely. The working group is putting together reference documents for interworking and frameworks for ADSL, and then, ultimately, we will disband and you might see the ADSL Forum doing interoperability and high-level architecture work.
Will widespread adoption of Universal ADSL spell the demise of ISDN services? And do the emerging Always On/Dynamic ISDN (AO/DI) services that BellSouth and other regional Bells plan to roll out this year compete directly with Universal ADSL? ISDN BRI has additional capabilities around voice, such as for supporting faxing and other voice lines. It's a higher-end service. And ISDN is available today virtually everywhere in the region. ADSL may, however, replace ISDN totally for Internet access--but that will take at least two to three years to happen. We continue to evaluate options for our current service offerings, including AO/DI ISDN. Eventually, the ADSL and AO/DI products may collide, and then we will make the right market and economic decision for our services.
What is the Universal ADSL Working Group's timetable for delivering a specification? We were delivering a high-level specification to the International Telecommunications Union [ITU] in February and will have a final draft at the ITU's next meeting this summer. Universal ADSL, or G.Lite, is going to be based on the existing T1.413 specification. |