This is from NTRO's VP of marketing for Netro wrote this article. Wow. She takes the high road too, and doesn't pump her own company directly. This article gives a great overview of the different access methods out there, where wireless fits in, and a little about how it works. I'm impressed by her style, and the style of a company which would hire a marketing VP capable of this type of work. The article is a reprint from Wireless Review....
wirelessreview.com
By Cynthia Hillery
The metropolitan access market (small- to mid-size businesses with up to 1,000 employees) is bandwidth deficient. Historically, this segment is overcharged and under-served. Traditional ILEC voice-centric solutions cannot accommodate its growing need for data services such as in-house e-commerce management applications, including orders and billing for retail sites and network applications.
With a complex mix of voice and data emerging — Pioneer Consulting reports that data per user will increase 5-fold over the next five years (see Figure 1) — the market has opened for CLECs to compete with incumbents through value-added services and integrated solutions.
Figure 1. Pioneer Consulting reports a significant demand for data.
To compete for small medium enterprise (SME) revenue, CLECs will have to provide a last-mile solution that encompasses three critical areas: bandwidth flexibility to accommodate bursty data traffic; service integration to combine voice and data within a reliable system; and coverage economics for quick market entrance and incremental growth.
New technology is the only way CLECs can begin to compete in the incumbent's backyard. Many different access technologies can address the last-mile bottleneck: fiber, xDSL, cable modems, 3G, broadband satellite and broadband fixed wireless. Each has its own strengths and weaknesses, and caters to the needs of different market segments. Many industry experts believe the technology with the best fit for the SME, particularly larger customers in the segment, is point-to-multipoint broadband wireless access (BWA). Its incremental growth potential and ability to integrate and provision value-added services could determine its success.
Fiber There is no doubt that fiber-optic backbone provides the fastest speeds, the most bandwidth flexibility, and a high degree of reliability and security, but also it has disadvantages. For example, fiber is connected to only 3% of all U.S. commercial buildings. Although carriers have deployed fiber effectively between high-capacity switches and high-traffic nodes in communications networks, deploying fiber to the residential and business customer is capital intensive and often cost prohibitive ($200,000 to $300,000 per mile), especially in non-urban markets. Few markets ensure the revenue to justify this expense.
Another disadvantage of fiber is the significant cost of installing fiber routes without assurance that customers will use the built-in capacity fully. Carriers have to estimate customers' needs along proposed fiber routes, and often costly adjustments are required after installation, depending on the coverage or shortfall of customer demand. Therefore, the telecom industry generally has used fiber to provide high-value and premium-priced services to large customers with business-critical applications.
Connecting the metropolitan access market via fiber is time-consuming and risky. Because carriers typically don't offer fiber to SMEs, there has been no feasible technology to provide them with high-speed data and voice services.
XDSL Thanks to successful IPOs of companies such as Covad and Rhythms, xDSL technology has become a hot topic lately. The xDSL technology family concentrates on maximizing the throughput of a telephone company's existing twisted-pair copper network. The xDSL variants take different approaches to transmitting the maximum number of bits per second through the legacy copper access network. The throughput on a twisted copper pair is a trade-off between bandwidth and distance: The greater the bandwidth, the shorter the network reach.
All data transfer rates, however, depend on the copper plant's condition. Copper lines currently installed have not met initial expectations for xDSL applications. Usually, xDSL enables carriers to leverage existing copper because there is no need to lay new infrastructure such as a second pair of copper wires as is the case with ISDN.
XDSL is a good technology for transporting data across the metropolitan access market but has a limited ability to converge voice and data. Its true niche is as a data-transport technology for the small office/home office (SOHO) market, where it will compete directly with cable modems.
Cable Modems Cable modems and hybrid fiber coax provide faster speeds than analog modems or ISDN. This technology is the originator of the recent AT&T activity in the cable market (TCI and MediaOne). Cable operators are entering the CLEC market rapidly.
A coaxial cable has more bandwidth than twisted copper pair, but most companies built cable networks with limited 2-way capabilities. The traditional coaxial networks are 1-way networks, which means they transmit signals only from the cable company to the subscriber. The cost to upgrade cable networks, which are largely analog, to a digital format and to provide switched services, parallels the cost required to install fiber.
Specifically, for small- and medium-size businesses, there are drawbacks to using cable modems for voice and data services. Cable modems are asymmetrical, so they do not fit well with future e-commerce applications. Cable network upgrades are slow with substantial fixed costs. Moreover, cable companies have a reputation of providing poor service to consumers with long outages.
Security is another concern. Cable modems operate over a shared system, increasing risks against other technologies. Cable-system powering requirements increase the risk of relying on this technology as the sole means of communications. Typically, metropolitan-access businesses strive for telecom services that are compliant with 99.999% reliability. It still is uncertain whether cable operators will be able to deliver this reliability.
Cable modems are mainly a residential, or SOHO play, and will emerge as an impressive competitor against ILECs and xDSL technology.
Wireless Arena Broadband satellite and 3G technologies have been field tested, but not proved, and lack defined standards. Although development continues, deployments will be limited for quite some time. They promise to provide high-speed access for mobility, but a business-quality launch is several years away.
That leaves BWA solutions as the best choice for the metropolitan access market from an economic and ease-of-deployment standpoint. Today's point-to-point technology will serve as a backhaul option. Point-to-multipoint is the well-designed technology that will facilitate multiple-subscriber access to the network for integrated voice and data applications. It can address the three main concerns of the metropolitan access market: bandwidth flexibility, service integration and coverage economics.
Point-to-multipoint deployments will accelerate by year-end. Currently, fewer than 12 networks are “on-net,” but carriers are testing roll-out plans and network integration. (See Table 1.) As a general guideline, three months after testing, carriers move to citywide deployment; six to nine months later, they deploy nationwide. The Strategis Group estimates the rapid growth of this market will facilitate customer-premise-equipment (CPE) revenues close to $3 billion by 2003. Networking equipment will equal, or at least double, the CPE investment over the same time period.
ART The company has connected 126 buildings to its network with service orders from 250 customers. ART offers commercial service in Portland, OR; Phoenix and Seattle via point-to-point technology. In addition, it is trialing point-to-multipoint throughout the country. Formus It is conducting point-to-point testing and trials in Budapest; Strasbourg; France; and Denver. The company will introduce live point-to-multipoint service beginning this summer and throughout 1999. Nextlink The company is testing and trialing point-to-point and point-to-multipoint technology in its Plano, TX, lab facilities and commercial environments in the United States. It will offer commercial broadband wireless service in 1999. Teligent It is offering commercial service in 27 markets comprising 430 cities and towns. It has more than 3,100 buildings under lease or option. The company has equipped 444 buildings with fixed-wireless installations using point-to-point and point-to-multipoint technology. By year-end it expects to be in more than 40 markets. WinStar The company has 17,000 customers and access rights to 4,800 buildings. Currently, it offers commercial service in more than 30 markets using point-to-point and point-to-multipoint technology. It plans to reach 45 U.S. markets as well as six international markets by year-end.
Table 1. Deployment progress and plans for some broadband wireless carriers
Point-to-multipoint is a complex networking technology that has a high degree of reliability and scaleability, along with minimal infrastructure and real estate requirements, while providing faster speeds than cable modems and xDSL technologies. Broadband wireless technology is optimized for business customers requiring integrated voice and data capabilities within the 2- to 8-T1 range.
In addition, this new technology still is undergoing significant developments. For example, there are two key design variances for point-to-multipoint systems.
One difference is in the transmit/receive signal duplexing mechanism: frequency division duplexing (FDD) vs. time division duplexing (TDD).
FDD divides the upstream and downstream transmission channels into separate frequencies within a sector, so each radio transmits simultaneously and continuously. TDD divides a single channel for both upstream and downstream transmissions by time instead of frequency, so for every given millisecond, some time is dedicated to transmitting and some to receiving.
FDD is commercially viable and TDD is in development. For international growth opportunities, FDD is the only compliant design for the ETSI standard.
Another design variance is in the spectrum resource access mechanism: FDMA vs. TDMA. FDMA divides the spectrum into separate, unique bands. Each user acquires a band, or pipe, to access the network. But this does not allow for dynamic bandwidth allocation, and much of the system's capacity may remain idle. First generation point-to-multipoint products were FDMA-based, but the market demand for service integration, bandwidth flexibility and economic growth has prompted a second-generation evolution to a TDMA architecture.
TDMA users access the network on a time-shared basis, where each slot is directed to a fixed subscriber — a packet in every time slot. With a media-access-control protocol that enables multiple subscribers to burst with their data transmissions, TDMA facilitates dynamic bandwidth allocation.
TDMA requires ATM technology to maintain voice quality of service and prioritize subscribers for the best spectrum management. It appears TDMA, coupled with ATM, is becoming an industry standard rapidly.
The most technologically advanced point-to-multipoint systems transmit voice, IP and frame-relay traffic to and from multiple subscribers. A well-designed network with a TDMA/ATM architecture can perform statistical multiplexing and dynamic bandwidth allocation to reduce the cost per DS-0 drastically. Compared to fiber at an average of $1,513/DS-0, point-to-multipoint on a fully loaded base station is $175/DS-0 to $400/DS-0.
Market Divergence With emerging broadband technologies, the market diverges between the residential/SOHO market, the metropolitan access market and large enterprises. There is a broadband access solution that is tailored to every subset, but the metropolitan access market comprises the greatest percentage. Cable modems and xDSL will dominate the market space demanding less broadband access capacity. Fiber, enabling expansive broadband requirements, will reach its saturation level because of fixed labor costs.
These technologies leave a prominent access gap for small- and medium-size businesses. Point-to-multipoint could emerge as the solution for closing the gap between the customer premise and carrier backbone.
Hillery (cindyh@netro-corp.com) is Netro vice president of marketing.
Technology Basics
Point-to-multipoint systems divide the air surrounding a tall building in which a hub/base station resides into multiple pie-shaped sectors. (See Figure 2.) The range of a system is 3km to 15km, depending on frequencies and weather conditions. The base station aggregates voice and data traffic from all system subscribers and is connected to the central office by fiber or point-to-point radio connections.
Figure 2. A basic point-to-multipoint design
The system connects with several T1 ports as well as Ethernet and frame-relay ports. The subscriber-access system transforms integrated voice and data communications to an intermediate RF and sends it to an outdoor rooftop radio unit. Information is converted into the appropriate band and transmitted to the base-station radio. A modem at the base station demodulates the signal into digital stream and multiplexes it through the base station onto the ATM network.
The subscriber radio unit is the size of a shoebox, and you can mount it on a building or behind glass. Unlike the fiber set up, which owes approximately 80% of its cost to labor, the point-to-multipoint system installation comprises less than 20% of the system cost and only takes hours. |