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To: Glenn McDougall who wrote (1267)10/14/1999 8:59:00 AM
From: Kent Rattey  Respond to of 24042
 
telecom99news.itu.int

WDM Makes Waves
Carriers all over the world look to catch the wavelength by adding to
their existing fiber
Frank Barbetta, Contributing Writer

Wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM), once considered just another transport technology, is fast
becoming the heart and soul of the global telecommunications infrastructure. Carriers worldwide are
deploying WDM like never before, as emerging higher-capacity WDM technology-80 wavelengths
with 10-Gbit/s channels-makes its way into the market.

WDM isn't new in carrier networks. But its popularity is on the rise because of increased traffic
demands, mostly due to the Internet. Carriers are looking to WDM as a cost-effective way to
increase bandwidth without laying new fiber optic cabling for point-to-point traffic. WDM fragments a
single strand of fiber into different wavelengths that provide multiple channels of multigigabit speeds.

North American long-distance providers such as AT&T, Sprint Corp., MCI WorldCom Inc. and other
regional and newcomer carriers, are adding WDM to their fiber optic plants. Global Crossing Ltd.
(Hamilton, Bermuda) is building WDM into its new transoceanic submarine cable network, and BT
and other carriers in Europe are building pan-European lightwave networks with WDM.

And in the United States, incumbent local service providers like Bell Atlantic Corp. are considering
WDM for their existing fiber interoffice trunks, as well as for the local loop. Competitive local service
providers and competitive access providers (CAPs) with fiber- and radio-distribution networks such
as WinStar Communications Inc. (New York) are also in the early stages of WDM implementation.

WDM also provides add/drop muxing for the fiber ring, which lets carriers split waves on a ring
among different cities, for instance, using a single mux. Add/drop capability already exists in
traditional, copper-based time-division multiplexing (TDM) networks, and carriers currently use WDM
to concentrate and consolidate their mix of wide-area network (WAN) platforms. Former standalone
Synchronous Optical Network/Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (Sonet/SDH) electronics are now
getting integrated into WDM transmission systems, and the groundwork is being laid for direct
interfaces of optic/WDM systems into WAN switching and routing hardware. These integrated
boxes, such as Lucent Technologies Inc.'s WaveStar, handle WDM, optic routing, Sonet/SDH and
network management.

On a Roll

Service providers are buying WDM systems like hotcakes. Barry Flanigan, senior analyst with
Ovum Ltd. (London), says several factors are driving WDM deployment today. Among them are the
surge in worldwide data traffic, mostly due to Internet bandwidth demands; new competition in global
telecom's liberalized markets, which has forced both existing carriers to expand their networks and
new operators to grow capacity fast; and optical networking in the telco infrastructure, where WDM
can be used for more than just increasing capacity and relieving congestion. "We see price
reductions making WDM economically attractive for network applications, and for shorter-distance
applications in the metropolitan, interoffice and access regions of the network," says Flanigan.

Ovum expects sales of WDM equipment worldwide to increase from over US$1.1 billion in 1998 to
more than $8.6 billion in 2005. North America's market share will fall from around 80 percent to 50
percent during that period, as deployment increases in Europe, Asia and Latin America.

Communications Industry Researchers Inc. (CIR, Charlottesville, Va.) says that WDM has begun to
generate significant equipment revenue since 1996, and the hope is that it will drive all-optical
switched networks in the future. CIR says leading WDM vendors like Alcatel N.V., Lucent and
Nortel Networks Corp. are each shipping a few hundred WDM systems per year.

The average price for WDM systems shipped to service providers in the United States ranges from
$500,000 to $2 million, and the pricing is much the same in Europe and the Pacific Rim, according
to CIR. Its shipment forecasts, which are somewhat higher than Ovum's, are based on its
assumption that telecom traffic growth will drive infrastructure upgrades and that WDM will dominate
the high-end Sonet sector by 2007. "The systems at OC-48 and above will increasingly have WDM
capability rather than be pure time-division multiplexed Sonet," says Lawrence Gasman, president
of CIR.

In contrast, forecasts from Insight Research Corp. (Parsippany, N.J.) are relatively conservative, with
WDM and Sonet/SDH markets at nearly US$5.3 billion and $15 billion, respectively, in 2003.

Most WDM vendors today are working on higher-capacity muxes, with 80-wavelength and larger
configurations. Although many carriers operate 16- and 40-wavelength implementations, upgrading
to the higher-capacity WDM will be simple with the new generation of products.

Vendors are also adding support for Sonet and SDH transport protocols to WDM muxes, which
extend Sonet's multiple OC-48 (2.4 Gbit/s) to OC-192 (10 Gbit/s) channel levels and higher, and
SDH's synchronous transfer mode (STM) equivalents, from STM-16 to STM-64 and higher.

Hot Stuff

Lucent remains the prime WDM supplier to AT&T, which boasts the highest WDM concentration
among all carriers. AT&T's goal is to install some 1,800 WDM muxes by year's end-up from about
1,200 in the first quarter of this year. Most of AT&T's existing WDM systems are 16 wavelengths,
but AT&T is also testing Lucent's new WaveStar 400G equipment, which can hit 80 wavelengths.

Lucent is also selling WDM to carriers with large fiber optic and wireless network plans. Among its
U.S. customers are Winstar, Global Crossing, Hyperion Communications Inc. (Coudersport, Pa.)
and Time Warner Telecom (Greenwood Village, Colo.), while some of the overseas buyers include
the Netherlands' KPN Telecom BV, Spain's Telefonica de Espana and Korea Telecom. "We are
initially putting in equipment handling 80 wavelengths at OC-48 speeds, but we'll go to 40
wavelengths at OC-192 when that becomes available," says George Simons, senior vice president
of network construction and deployment for WinStar.

Simons says capacity expansion will be key for WinStar's intercity and metro ring plans for fiber,
which are locally accessed via GHz-level radio, and for its network service for Internet service
providers. "Internet traffic is doubling every six to eight months," he says. "Our customers will need
a lot of bandwidth, so we are looking for the big WDM systems."

Kathy Szelag, vice president of Lucent's Optical Networking Group, says that while many service
deployments today are at lower-wavelength levels, most carriers are starting to test WDM systems
handling at 80, versus 16, wavelengths. "The reason is that the initial customer price and other
costs for cutting something over at above 16 is better than below 16," she says. "So you might as
well just buy the bigger systems and upgrade."

Stan Hanks, vice president of research and technology at Enron Communications (Portland, Ore.),
says that once fiber is terminated on the lines, you just bring up a new channel by installing an
interface card in the WDM system. "Initially you may need only a handful of channels," says Hanks,
"but if traffic needs drive higher, the investment is on hand. A plug-in is simple."

"You can get the equivalents of OC-48 and OC-192 without Sonet but using ATM [asynchronous
transfer mode] as the interface," says Mark Allen, manager of technology development at Williams
Communications (Tulsa, Okla.), which runs WDM. "The fact is that anybody that doesn't have to do
such legacy networking can start right away with 16 or 32 wavelengths or more."

Although carriers worldwide today can deploy 40-wavelength, OC-192 systems, this capacity isn't
being fully implemented due to a variety of traffic and economic factors. "It's not just a matter of
demand for the hottest stuff," he says. "There is the logistics of all the electronics to be installed.
This can be a big capital expense."

Long-distance carrier GST Telecommunications Inc. (Vancouver, Wash.) is sticking with an 8- and
16-wavelength system because its technology is "stable and safe," and its prices are declining with
the arrival of the newer WDM technology. "In a year or two, or three, if the fiber is full, you can
migrate upward or even swap out systems completely and maybe even skip 32 and 64 wavelengths
altogether, and go with 128 or so," says Steve Hemsley, vice president of engineering for GST.

Hemsley says fiber and WDM are the "real" core of the network, versus Internet protocol (IP), ATM
and Sonet, which are all basically transient technologies.

In fact, fiber and WDM are becoming nearly synonymous. The two go hand in hand among many of
the carrier interconnection agreements, fiber swaps and capacity resale arrangements in the United
States. WDM, for instance, was a big part of Williams Telecommunications' capacity-sale deals
with WinStar and GST, as well as Enron's with Frontier Communications (Rochester, N.Y.), AT&T's
with At Home Corp. (@Home, Redwood City, Calif.), and Global Crossing's with Europe's Unisource
consortium. That group consists of DDI Corp. (Tokyo), Level 3 Communications Inc. (Omaha, Neb.)
and Cable & Wireless PLC (C&W, London).

On the Fast Track

Meanwhile, carriers want even more capacity and enhanced optics in WDM equipment, and the
vendors are taking notice. "By year's end, it will be common to have 200 to 300 Gbit/s per fiber,"
says Brian McFadden, vice president and general manager of Nortel's OPTera Solutions Division.
"The industry is already well beyond 32 wavelengths and into 40-, 50- and 60-wavelength domains.
During the fourth quarter we expect more."

More could mean 160-wavelength, 40-Gbit/s systems called OC-768/STM-256, says Ross Nelson,
worldwide business development manager for telecom test and measurement at Tektronix Inc.
(Wilsonville, Ore.).

Meantime, specifications and standards for WDM's A/D muxes and optical cross-connects-as well
as management, test and measurement issues-are among the key topics being addressed by the
Optical Internetworking Forum (OIF). The OIF, which includes members from Ciena Corp.
(Linthicum, Md.), Cisco Systems Inc. (San Jose, Calif.), AT&T, Telcordia Technologies Inc.
(formerly Bellcore, Morristown, N.J.), Hewlett-Packard Co. (H-P, Palo Alto, Calif.), Qwest
Communications International Inc. (Denver), Sprint and MCI WorldCom, is also working on direct
optical interfaces for routing and switching equipment, as well as interoperability agreements among
WDM vendors and service providers.




To: Glenn McDougall who wrote (1267)10/14/1999 9:03:00 AM
From: Kent Rattey  Respond to of 24042
 
telecom99news.itu.int

Rising Tide of Subsea Cable Providers
Undersea cable companies run silent, run deep at Telecom 99
Kate Gerwig

The undersea cable industry has been underground so far at Telecom 99, but several companies are
expected to surface in the next few days.

One of the newest players in the subsea world is Pangea Ltd. (Hamilton, Bermuda), a company that
grew out of a business school project created by four Georgetown University students. Poised at the
base of the escalator leading to Hall 1 at Palexpo, Pangea is banking its business plan on the vast
amounts of Internet traffic in Scandinavian countries and the dearth of undersea cable linking
Scandinavia to Northern Europe.

Pangea this week announced plans to build a $400 million regional undersea and terrestrial cable
system, which will link Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Dusseldorf, Goteborg, Hamburg, Helsinki,
London, Malmo, Oslo and Stockholm. Pangea anticipates putting its Scandinavian network into
commercial service December 2000.

"We think Scandinavia is underserved even though the region generates large amounts of Internet
traffic," Pangea vice president of marketing and sales Stephen Lovas said at Telecom99. Pangea
will build other regional networks, but Lovas did not disclose locations.

Pangea selected Alcatel Submarine Networks to lay the cable that will use dense wavelength
division multiplexing (DWDM) and resell capacity ranging from STM-1s to 10 Gbit/s to ISPs and
other service providers.

Several other undersea cable projects have been announced in the last six months, although the
vast majority are intended for transatlantic or Pacific routes. The amount of undersea cable on the
drawing board from providers including MCI WorldCom, Global Center, Project Oxygen and
GlobeNet, to name a few, raises the issue of whether the industry could be facing an undersea
capacity glut in a few years.

The answer depends on factors that include the amount of financing available for new systems,
whether capacity on undersea DWDM systems can be increased after they're in place and whether
new bandwidth-eating applications are developed to fill up the wavelengths.

"Undersea cable hasn't been a primary topic at the show, but it's picking up," says independent
telecom industry consultant Audrey Mandela. "If all of the proposed networks are actually built, it's
possible we maybe have a glut in about five years."

But announcing plans to build an undersea cable and actually doing it are two different things.

The financial community is brutally efficient in how it allocate capital, Brian Thompson, chairman
and CEO of Global TeleSystems Group Inc. (GTS, New York) said Tuesday. "If there is a system
that will not be going into a good return on investment position, they'll just deny them the financing."

GTS and undersea cable builder FLAG Telecom Ltd. (Hamilton, Bermuda) will announce plans
tomorrow that they will double capacity on their planned $1.2 billion FLAG Atlantic 1 undersea
cable. Throughput will be 2.4 Tbit/s on each of its two transatlantic links. FLAG Atlantic 1 will
bypass the beaches and connect directly to terrestrial networks in London, Paris and New York.
The cable is expected to begin carrying traffic in early 2001.

Even before Alcatel Submarine Networks starts laying the first cable, half of the capacity on
Flag-Atlantic 1 has been sold to service providers that include AT&T UK, Singapore Telecom,
Telecom Malaysia and Teleglobe (Montreal, Canada). Teleglobe is expected to announce this week
its plans to expand its undersea cable capacity from the U.S. to Europe and possibly Asia.

Separate from its 50/50 partnership to build the undersea cable with Flag Telecom, GTS plans to
purchase two of the fiber cables so it will own 400 Gbit/s of fully protected capacity from New York
into its trans-European fiber network. As part of the new trend in undersea fiber, Global Crossing
Ltd. (Hamilton, Bermuda) also plans to take its new undersea cable directly into cities on its
terrestrial network.

Using up capacity also depends on the bandwidth-needs of new applications. "Vendors who are
working to fatten up applications like video to fill up that capacity. Once that happens, it's likely
those pipes will get filled right up," Mandela said.

"The real question is how quickly does the technology change, and how rapidly does the demand for
capacity change," GTS's Thompson says. "That depends on whether the prices of the stuff that's
going over those cables can generate increased volumes."




To: Glenn McDougall who wrote (1267)10/14/1999 9:06:00 AM
From: Kent Rattey  Respond to of 24042
 
telecom99news.itu.int

Oxygen Still Breathing
Project official says global fiber initiative will go ahead as planned
Peter Heywood

Rumors that Project Oxygen is in trouble are unfounded, says vice
chairman Pekka Tarjanne. "We've got our financing essentially in order."
Details will be announced "in a few weeks time."

Tarjanne also said that stories about Oxygen shedding staff had been
misconstrued. "We have changed staff," he admitted. "We've got rid of
people, that's true. But we've recruited others." He noted that the number
of staff members has remained the same.

Project Oxygen Ltd. (Bermuda) is a scheme to build a global fiber
network that could revolutionize international telecom."We're looking
forward to our first IPO late next year," Tarjanne added.

He admitted that Oxygen's plans for financing the project are behind
schedule, which he described as "optimistic." "To get to grips with a $15 billion dollar project can't
be done overnight," Tarjanne said.




To: Glenn McDougall who wrote (1267)10/14/1999 9:10:00 AM
From: Kent Rattey  Respond to of 24042
 
telecom99news.itu.int

Pirelli Demonstrates 40-Gb/s Optical TDM
Plans trials in non-Sonet networks
Loring Wirbel, EETimes

Pirelli Cavi e Sistemi SpA today joined the stampede of optical network vendors dispensing with
dedicated Sonet-layer protection switching at Telecom '99.

The company showed off a four-node 40-Gbit/sec logical ring using its own WaveMux units based
on the FreeLight cable with 72-sqaure-micron cores. Pirelli plans to conduct trials in many networks
without any Sonet-layer protection switching.

The WaveMux optical time-division multiplexing network elements use return-to-zero soliton
technology which Pirelli already tested in 10-Gbit/sec networks. Stephen Harbour, vice president of
marketing for Pirelli's optical systems business, said that the optical Time Division Multiplexing
(TDM) systems can be deployed in 2.5-Gbit, 10-Gbit, or 40 Gigabit speeds in any combination of
collapsed layers desired by users including: Internet Protocol (IP) over wavelength, IP over
Sonet/SDH, and IP over ATM over Sonet.

Because the optical TDM technology offers 5-ms restoration on optical channels, the 50-ms Sonet
restoration often is not necessary, particularly when Layer 3 restoration for IP routing is used in
conjunction with optical channel restoration.

Pirelli is deploying its OC-768 (40-Gb/s networks) as one element in four of a four-node optical ring
implementing four separate logical rings. The 40-Gigabit network multiplexes four 10-Gbit
solution-pulse serial streams in one wavelength channel. It is run concurrently with a native
10-Gigabit stream which could be used in implementing IP over wavelength, though no IP routers
currently offer OC-192 line cards.

The other two logical networks in the ring are OC-48 IP over WDM using the Cisco GSR 12000
router, and OC-12 ATM over WDM, in which the Pirelli WaveMux Channel Configuration Unit is
linked with Cisco's BPX 8000 ATM switch.




To: Glenn McDougall who wrote (1267)10/14/1999 9:13:00 AM
From: Kent Rattey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24042
 
telecom99news.itu.int

European Bandwidth Boom Emerges
Carriers deploy loads of fiber in Europe, drastically reducing prices and
increasing options.
Kate Gerwig, tele.com

It's the bandwidth buffet that European users have waited too long to enjoy.

As deregulation takes hold in Europe, providers are building or stitching together networks to route
around the incumbents and offer cheaper services.

At least a dozen European- and U.S.-based service providers have announced plans to build
pan-European networks in the past 18 months. These are designed to take advantage of increasing
amounts of international traffic and offer lower prices to businesses and consumers now that
regulated pricing is becoming a thing of the past.

Whether they are laying fiber or buying from another company, service providers are banking on the
idea that customers want to buy services from one provider or a tightly integrated joint venture. BT
(London), MCI WorldCom Inc. (Jackson, Miss.), Viatel (New York), Colt Telecom Group PLC
(London), PSINet Inc. (Herndon, Va.), and KPNQwest (Amsterdam) are racing to complete their
pan-European fiber networks.At the same time, Concert, the AT&T-BT alliance, will turn up its
international network for AT&T and BT's 300 biggest multinational customers later this month in 22
cities in 17 countries, Concert CEO David Dorman said Monday at Telecom 99.

To extend its own European network, Global Crossing Ltd. (Hamilton, Bermuda) said Monday that it
will acquire Racal Electronics PLC (Bracknell, U.K.) for $1.65 billion. "This gives us a very complete
footprint in the U.K., more than 200 cities," Global Crossing founder Gary Winnick said. "It also
gives us a very big presence to add on to our pan-European network."

The new Euro-competitors are banking on the idea that customers want to buy from one provider
that can offer end-to-end network services, giving them one-call customer service and network
management for problems anywhere on a global network. This shift is nothing short of seismic, says
U.K.-based consultancy Ovum Ltd. (London), as the European telecom industry moves from a
demand-driven market where bandwidth is scarce and expensive to a supply-driven model where it is
plentiful and cheap.

Any bandwidth glut on Europe's horizon would be on land, not undersea, and only for the short term,
says David Neil, analyst with the Gartner Group Inc. (Stamford, Conn.).

"Talk to any of these companies building networks, and they're all building between the same 12 to
15 cities," Neil says. "There's a lot of bandwidth in the ground right now, but all on the same
routes." Add dense wavelength-division multiplexing (DWDM) to the mix, and the fiber capacity can
be stretched even farther. Most European enterprise customers expect to increase their bandwidth
needs by 300 percent to 600 percent in the next three years, says Neil: "Some companies are
talking about 800-percent increases, all driven by data and particularly the Internet."

Viatel chairman, president and CEO Michael Mahoney said Monday at a Telecom 99 panel
discussion that the availability of low-cost bandwidth will actually increase demand, adding that
today's networks can't handle advanced bandwidth-eating applications like videoconferencing and
streaming video.

"The whole history of the convergence of the IP and the telecommunications industry would lead us
to believe that corporate demand will increase rather than decrease as bandwidth becomes cheaper
and value-added applications come along," Mahoney says. A recent study from The Yankee Group
(Boston) noted that European corporate networks today are where U.S. corporate networks were a
full 12 years ago, Mahoney said. "We see no reason why this should be the case, other than what
has been until very recently the scarcity and high cost of cross-border and domestic bandwidth."

A little more than a year ago, a 2-megabit circuit between Paris and London cost Viatel $40,000 a
month wholesale. "I suspect that many corporate customers in those countries are still paying
similar rates," Mahoney says. The same circuit from a new competitor like Viatel now costs less
than $3,500 a month today under a one-year contract.

Wolter Lemstra, Lucent Technologies Inc.'s vice president for marketing and business development,
says the ease of using the Internet is creating a paradigm shift. By opening up what traditionally
was a very narrow industry, the telecom industry is helping the transition to a networked economy
that runs on bandwidth. "In terms of applications that will use the capacity, I believe we haven't seen
anything yet," Lemstra says.

While the talk of European networking is of transporting data between countries and continents, the
majority of network traffic in Europe still stays in individual countries. Most midsize and small
businesses have heavier local and/or national traffic needs, but that is also changing as the demand
for global Internet content threatens to clog borders, according to Chris Lewis, research director at
Yankee Group Europe.

According to Liam Strong, CEO of MCI WorldCom International, his company's objective is to build
and manage its own local, national, pan-European and global networks, all linked by MCI
WorldCom-owned undersea cable. Known as a provider for multinational business customers and
wholesaler to other top-tier service providers, Strong says about 20 percent of the available business
market is made up of multinational customers, with major national and regional corporate customers
making up another 10 to 20 percent.

"But the balance of 60 to 70 percent of the market is made of up small and midsize business
customers. To compete in that market, you need national reach," Strong said Monday.

To that end, MCI WorldCom plans to compete in the domestic market against the incumbents and
other local carriers in countries with enough business demand. Later this year, the company will
plans to offer national services in the United Kingdom, France, Italy and Germany.