T1, Anyone? Data Centric CLECs Make the Push for Non Voice Services [ASND reference]
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By Gary Kim
Only three things matter to competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs) choosing access platforms: data, data and data.
"Voice over data is a huge trend," says Lonnie Martin, ADC Telecommunications Inc. senior vice president.
Already, "many CLECs are focusing heavily on data services, including ICG Communications [Inc.], e.spire [Communications Inc.] and MDC [Communications] in Canada," says Roger Koenig, CEO of vendor Carrier Access Corp. And that means growing emphasis on Internet protocol (IP), asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) and frame relay services.
But the practical realities are that CLECs are scrambling to provide the services smaller businesses know they need today. That means support for office key systems, private branch exchange (PBX) equipment, local area networks (LANs) and Internet access.
So CLECs must connect to routers and voice switches. And, generally speaking, that means a heavy reliance on T1 technology as the access method.
Customer parsimony and carrier desire to maximize revenue are factors leading to the reliance on T1. Since smaller businesses are quite price- conscious, CLECs want low-cost solutions and the ability to capture multiple revenue streams. That, in turn, leads to a desire for voice and data delivery over a single pipe.
"I see the majority of CLECs going to a multiline data and voice platform to address the smaller and medium businesses, those that have $1,000-a-month total telecom bills, on a profitable basis," says Koenig.
The logic is fairly simple. CLECs excel financially when a single T1 pipe can be filled up with voice and incremental data traffic. "One infrastructure, multiple revenue streams" is the mantra.
Leasing full T1 circuits from the incumbent local exchange carrier (ILEC) is an option. But CLECs can do even better when two copper pairs can be leased at $50 and outfitted with high-bit-rate digital subscriber line (HDSL) modems to deliver multiple voice circuits and high-speed Internet or data access. So CLECs are installing traditional time division multiplex (TDM) access equipment, including channel service units/data service units (CSUs/DSUs) and integrated access devices (IADs) that handle IP and frame relay traffic, typically using HDSL. Despite the growing importance of newer synchronous protocols, T1 and DS-3 are the mainstays of CLEC access.
"You can put lots of things inside that kind of pipe, which is why it's popular and will grow for long time," says Martin.
Of course, there's no disagreement about the importance of IP and ATM. But "the speed at which the data revolution occurs is the subject of debate," says Stephen Susina, marketing manager for Tellabs Operations Inc. "But the traditional transport market continues to grow, and there still is no shift in customer demand in terms of what they actually deploy."
Packet Fever
Early summer telecom developments reinforced the notion that data is hot.
Even media companies further validated the notion that the Internet is a strategic new medium when Walt Disney Co. bought a 43 percent stake in Infoseek Corp., the web browser/ portal firm, with an option to take majority control. Meanwhile, the National Broadcasting Co. (NBC) acquired 19 percent of Cnet Inc., another portal firm, with an option to increase the stake to 60 percent within three years.
Telephony's equipment giants similarly signaled data's exploding importance. Northern Telecom Ltd. acquired Bay Networks Inc. Lucent Technologies rolled out its line of "PacketStar" IP systems, while virtually every other major telecom switch provider said it would do the same.
Carriers also made data-centric moves. Sprint Communications Co. announced an accelerated move to an all-cell, all-distance ATM network it calls the Integrated On-Demand Network (ION). AT&T Corp., meanwhile, introduced its new "GeoPlex" software environment, which allows third-party programmers to develop applications for the AT&T network. AT&T also tried to buy America Online Inc., but was rebuffed.
It's not hard to figure out why data is the "only" thing that matters.
According to analysts at Strategic Networks Consulting Inc., IP traffic will consume more than 90 percent of global bandwidth by 2003. Planners at Bell Atlantic Corp. and Sprint likewise estimate that IP revenues will eclipse 1998 voice and data revenues by 2001 or so. And of the 80 billion minutes worth of U.S. network traffic in 2001, about half will consist of IP or frame relay packets or ATM cells, according to Yankee Group analysts.
In the next century, data services will provide 80 percent of carrier revenues, but will comprise only 40 percent of network traffic, says Voorhees, N.J.-based consulting firm CIMI Corp.
That has to drive CLEC thinking on access platforms as well. Yankee Group researchers are more cautious, estimating that of the $140-plus billion carrier services market in 2001, just shy of $40 billion will be contributed by data services. So it stands to reason CLEC access thinking will be dominated by data access.
T1
Of course, the U.S. competitive access provider (CAP) market was built on private line (T1, 1.544 megabits per second [mbps] connections, especially) service, primarily to connect business customers with their long distance carrier points of presence. But CLECs now are assaulting the much-larger switched services market. And since data increasingly drives the business, frame relay, IP and ATM services should be wiping out the private line T1 business, right?
Nope. T1 continues to grow. Today, some 1.6 million T1 lines are in service in the United States, with growth rates in the 25 percent-a-year range, according to researchers at DataQuest, a Gartner Group Inc. company, and the Multimedia Telecommunications Association. This figure includes both "wholesale" use of DSL as a method for increasing capacity on existing copper and "retail" lines sold to end users. Executives at PairGain Technologies Inc., for example, suggest that DSL-driven T1 growth is in the 40 percent annual range.
Internet service providers (ISPs) are part of the reason T1 growth hasn't leveled off the way many observers anticipated.
"To support the growth of the Internet, 350,000 T1s and 25,000 T3s will need to be provisioned during the next four years," says Paul Johnson, an analyst with banking concern Robertson Stephens. "Compare this with today's installed base of about 300,000 T1s and 2,200 T3s."
DSL is another reason T1 keeps growing. Where traditional T1 systems require repeaters every 3,000 to 6,000 feet, DSL loops can reach 12,000 feet without using any repeaters. That translates into lower cost and higher usage. CLECs, for example, can lease "dry" copper pairs and convert them into T1 spans using HDSL modems.
"The most important thing today is to aggregate voice and data over a single pipe," says Dave Gallerman, Newbridge Networks Inc. vice president. "And of course, price, price, price."
The emphasis on integrated, affordable solutions is a direct result of CLEC focus on smaller and medium-sized businesses. Such customers focus on upfront capital costs, not life-cycle cost or "total cost of ownership." They also tend not to have in-house networking expertise. So CLECs want a simple, do-everything solution and equipment prices that don't scare customers away.
None of which is to say demand for capacity won't skyrocket further.
"DS-3 prices are going through the floor now," says Jesse Price, Eastern Research Inc. marketing vice president.
If so, CLECs will be looking for channelized DS-3 equipment that terminates directly at the PBX and router, says Price.
As that trend continues, CLECs will gain more freedom to choose platforms. Today, it makes a difference which transport format a carrier chooses.
"Up to about 9mbps, it makes a cost difference whether a carrier chooses ATM, frame relay or TDM," says Tom Nolle, president of CIMI. "At T3 and above, it doesn't matter that much."
What ultimately may matter is which packet format is used and by whom. Most incumbent carriers are ATM adherents. ISPs and several of the new long distance carriers are IP-centric. It remains unclear what CLECs ought to do.
"The crux of the CLEC business is that it's hard to make bets about technology," says Leif Hoglund, business development vice president for E/O Networks.
T1 is fundamental. "But the access part of the market is really fraught with confusion," Hoglund says. "ATM to the desktop, IP over SONET (syncronous optical network) are examples. You can't tell where it's going to go."
What is abundantly clear is that no carrier wants to deal with "stranded capital," in which network assets are deployed but only a fraction of full capacity is used, or in which capacity cannot be expanded to meet additional need. Even the regional Bell operating companies (RBOCs), for example, now are investing in smaller line-count digital loop carrier (DLC) equipment, says Kris Sowolla, E/O Networks product management director.
CLEC Trends
CLECs tend to fall into three camps when it comes to access platforms.
Some carriers have a clear focus on services they expect to offer, and want an optimized platform that addresses those services. Such a business strategy favors single-purpose terminals that trade flexibility for lower initial capital investment. Chicago-based Focal Communications Corp., for example, is a local dial tone specialist. NorthPoint Communications Inc. and Covad Communications Co., have different business strategies based on a wide variety of potential services, including voice, data and local and wide area networking. In such environments, flexibility is more important.
Some contestants also are betting that new applications, as yet unforeseen, will be important. So platform adaptability is strategic for that reason, as well. Data-centric and "bundled services" providers such as Intermedia Communications Inc., GST Telecommunications Inc. and Convergent Communications Inc. are examples.
"If you're in a 'get-me-to-revenue' mode, you may not want to pay for a multifunction solution," says Gallerman.
The low-cost, application-specific terminal fits there. But "some service providers want to do a limited set of things real well, while others want to do everything the customer wants," says Gallerman.
The integrated, feature-rich device may work better in that scenario.
Its the Equipment Stupid
As one might expect, two concurrent trends are seen in access equipment. Cheaper, single-purpose equipment and integrated, multifunction devices are available. One example of the single-purpose terminal is the ADC Satellite 651 CSU/DSU. It's aimed at the business-to-business ISP, for example.
Vina Technologies Inc.'s T1 Integrator is a prime example of the multipurpose trend. The Business Office Exchange version, for example, supports key system voice switching as well as remote and Internet access. It incorporates the functions of a router, channel bank, T1 CSU/DSU, multiplexer, frame relay access device and Internet firewall.
Adtran Inc.'s Total Access Multi-Service Optical Platform is another example of the "multifunction" trend. Total Access supports HDSL, integrated services digital network (ISDN), T1, optical DS-2 and DS-3 access at a central office or point-of-presence. Likewise, Premisys Communications Inc.'s Q-155 supports TDM traffic (T1/DS-3), frame relay, IP, ATM and HDSL on the access side of the terminal, and SONET on the transport side of the terminal.
HDSL integration also is a prime trend. Telco Systems Inc.'s Access 60 and Access 45 integrated access devices, as well as the ADC Telecommunications/Carrier Access Corp. EZT-1/DI-HDSL terminal, for example, incorporate HDSL directly into access terminals. One advantage is the marrying of Soneplex management tools with the lower-cost access device.
"We're seeing more and more requests for simple network management protocol (SNMP) capabilities built right into the access vehicles," says Rick Vesny, ADC marketing director.
Carriers also are trying to collapse whole layers of equipment in the network. Trends such as IP over SONET (see related story, page 26) and multiservice switches are examples. The Ascend Communications Inc. GX 550 combines digital cross-connect system (DCS) with SONET multiplexer functions to collapse a SONET, DCS and frame relay/ATM switch into one device.
The same approach to simplifying networks applies to the Lucent Technologies Inc./Sun Microsystems Inc. "ISP-in-a-box" approach. The two firms bundle IP telephony, remote access, network management, e-mail server, web server and electronic commerce capabilities.
IP was once considered a legacy technology destined for rapid replacement by open systems interconnection (OSI) protocols. Instead, OSI died, while IP has swept the world. T1, also a legacy technology, is probably going to surprise us as well.
Gary Kim is strategic research director for Convergent Communications Inc. He can be reached at (303) 749-3061.
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