Thread,
A very interesting article from tele.com about IXC and cable modem/HFC testing.
This IXC field test rolls up many of the last mile cable issues we've been discussing:
Telecommuting; VoIP/Cable; VPNs; QoS/Encryption; IN/AIN access; and more. From: teledotcom.com
Enjoy, Frank Coluccio =================================
Taking Work Home
IXC Communications tests cable-based VPNs for telecommuting
By Carl Weinschenk. Carl Weinschenk is executive technology editor for tele.com. He can be reached atcweinsch@cmp.com
Today marks the cable industry's entry into the widely pursued market for virtual private networks (VPNs). Four companies--IXC Communications Inc. (Austin, Texas), Cisco Systems Inc. (San Jose, Calif.), high-speed data provider The ISP Channel (a subsidiary of San Francisco-based SoftNet Systems Inc.) and cable operator Cablevision of Lake Travis (Austin, Texas)--are scheduled to launch a telecommuting trial today, using Internet protocol (IP) technology over cable infrastructure.
The trial is beginning with a small group of home-based IXC employees, letting them access all the applications and data available to an IXC worker sitting next to the watercooler, says Chris Rothlis, IXC's vice president of new product development. Within six months, the trial will develop from this "friendly user" test to a beta test with potential customers, Rothlis says.
The goal of the trial is to set up VPNs between homes and offices, via the cable headend and IXC's wide-area network (WAN). Cablevision of Lake Travis uses modems from Com21 Inc. (Milpitas, Calif.). Packetized voice will be handled by Cisco's IP phones at the customer premises. The public switched telephone network (PSTN) will be reached via a gateway at IXC headquarters. A Cisco call manager will provide gatekeeper functions designed to control packet delivery and not overwhelm the system. The companies intend to implement IP Security (IPSec) encryption later in the trial.
Applications to be tested include four-digit dialing to other telecommuters and office workers, use of the company PBX for local and long-distance calling and always-on remote access to company databases. IP packets will be delivered at 1 Mbit/s; upstream speed is 200 kbit/s. "This is the ultimate work-at-home scenario, where computers are online full-time with broadband modems, the service connects through the company's PBX and video can be supported," says Jess King, the owner of Cablevision of Lake Travis. The system, which is not part of Cablevision Systems Corp. (Woodbury, N.Y.), serves about 7,000 subscribers in the Austin suburb.
The new service is being developed despite the lack of ready standards supporting a number of functions. For instance, the cable system must deliver voice and other applications with quality of service (QoS) and low levels of latency, or packet delay. The cable industry has settled on a standard for this, the second version of the Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification (DOCSIS). With DOCSIS 1.1 released only weeks ago, however, no gear is ready. Instead of waiting around for DOCSIS 1.1 products to show up, the partners will use proprietary packet prioritization and queuing techniques from Cisco. Under Cisco's so-called "tag-switching" approach, packets that need prioritization--such as those transmitting voice or video--carry identifying flags and are handled accordingly. Unflagged packets are put in a queue to wait their turn.
Likewise, standards groups are just starting to sort through the knotty problems of providing IP networks access to the intelligent network (IN) and advanced intelligent network (AIN) technology now used on the PSTN for voice VPNs and other advanced services. Again, instead of waiting for this to be worked through--which may take years--the system will use proprietary AIN-like features from Cisco. Similar development projects are in the laboratory stage, but this is the first deployment, says Boyd Peterson, vice president of consultancy The Yankee Group (Boston). The question that emerges: Why would IXC go to all the trouble of trialing a cable-based VPN if key techniques underlying the system are going to change? The answer is that much of what has to be mastered to make VPNs work on hybrid fiber/coax (HFC) cable systems is independent of the standards. "It's order entry, provisioning, billing," says Rothlis. "A lot of the issues are not DOCSIS- or QoS-related. If I can get in early and learn my lessons and learn with my employees, I'll be ahead of the game."
The end goal is a suite of products for small, midsize and, eventually, larger corporations. IXC could someday make this technology a standard element on its enterprise gateways. IXC, which targets small and midsize businesses, won't decide on when the technology will become a product until after the trial, Rothlis says. The decision will be based on the state of standards, how the gear performs, the technology's scalability, IXC's ability to support it and customer demand, he says.
The demand issue won't be a problem if current VPN trends continue. The market will increase from $500 million this year to $4 billion next, according to market watcher Infonetics Research Inc. (San Jose, Calif.). Various Internet service providers (ISPs) and local and long-distance telephone companies are seeking to fill this demand using a number of access technologies. For its part, IXC is considering expanding this basic technology model beyond HFC to other access techniques, such as digital subscriber line (DSL), wireless and dedicated links such as T1 (1.544 Mbit/s), Rothlis says. For now, though, the focus is on cable.
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