SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Frank Coluccio Technology Forum - ASAP -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ftth who wrote (889)1/8/2000 12:55:00 AM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Respond to of 1782
 
re: routing pucks, and GITH (Gigabit Internet to the Home)

Thanks, Dave.

The PON material, we've been covering that for over two or three
years now, over in the Last Mile thread.

But the CANET2 article you provided in the uplink? This is exactly
the blue print for discussion I've been looking for. Even if it is
only a discussion paper at this time. Heck, that's what we do here.
Discuss. We'd be dangerous if we did anything else. smile

canet2.net

I've copied the abstract from this paper below, along with the TOC. It
speaks to many of the principles and goals we've been discussing here, and
then some, i.e., the "routing puck."

Then again, I don't recall introducing any social implications, school,
libraries, etc.

I've not read the entire article yet. Let's see if the routing puck supports the
vLAN functionality that I suggested for one of the later phases of our
fictitious model upstream. I'm looking forward to reading the entire paper,
tomorrow.
======

I note that in the abstract below Anraud mentions some terms which are
very reminiscent of another Canadian's work recently, namely Francois
Menard who along with Timothy Denton wrote a paper for the Canadian
CRTC on Open Access for ISPs which I posted somewhere upstream.
One such term was "Competitive Access Interconnection Point" which
speaks to a question by Jay, earlier.

Here it is:

Message 12304474
tmdenton.com

Regards, Frank

=====

From: canet2.net

"Gigabit Internet to every Canadian Home by 2005"

A Discussion Paper - Bill St. Arnaud

Abstract

One of last great impediments to wide scale and rapid deployment of the
Information Society is the "last mile" issue. This paper outlines some of the
issues and history of the last mile problem and proposes a research and
development program leading to early deployment of extreme high speed
Internet access to schools and libraries which will then underpin an
architectural framework for high speed Internet access to the home -
Gigabit Internet to the Home (GITH).

The proposed GITH strategy calls for the deployment of a third
residential network service operating in parallel with existing telephone and
cable delivery mechanisms and thereby avoiding the regulatory and
technical hurdles of integrating traditional telephone and cable services into
one common delivery mechanism.


The "divergence" of these services rather than "convergence" may allow
for early and rapid deployment of GITH perhaps in advance of the
currently planned large scale rollouts of cable modem and xDSL services.
Over time the GITH service may also incorporate voice telephony and
cable TV services.

Although there are many research issues that need to be addressed such as scaling, integrated layer 3 optical services and network management an
economically viable architecture may be possible that incorporates
competitive equal access at both the physical and logical layers, by using
low cost Dense Wave Division Multiplexing (DWDM) equipment, and new
Internet architectural concepts currently under development in CANARIE's
optical Internet network -CA*net 3.

It is estimated that a GITH system would cost less than Hybrid Fiber Coax
(HFC) systems currently being deployed and would be marginally more
expensive than xDSL or Cable Modem services. The access bandwidth
could scale from as little as a few megabits per second to a mind boggling
several terabits per second using either individual dedicated fibers,
dedicated wavelengths, logical switched paths or direct statistical
multiplexing in a neighborhood router on a chip called a "routing puck".

Governments can play a key role in accelerating the deployment of a GITH
network by requiring service providers who want to provide public funded
Internet service to schools and libraries to deploy at the same time a GITH
network infrastructure that would easily scale to support thousands of
homes with competitive equal access. The early market pull of GITH
network may be "always on" applications, multimedia "push" services, mega
e-mail, DWDM caching, and DVD video applications.

THIS IS A DISCUSSION PAPER. THE IDEAS AND CONCEPTS
PRESENTED IN THIS PAPER IN NO WAY REFLECT OR
REPRESENT THE POSITION OR VIEWS OF THE CANARIE
BOARD AND/OR ITS MANAGEMENT.

Table of Contents

1.0 Introduction

2.0 Historical Perspective
2.1 Cable and xDSL Modems
2.2 Wireless local loop
2.3 FSAN - FTTx Technologies

3.0 A Radical New Concept for the last mile Issue
3.1 The Business Case for a GITH Network

4.0 A Possible Architecture for a GITH network
4.1 Neighborhood Competitive Access Interconnection Point
4.2 DWDM in the metro area and to the home
4.3 Passive Optical Networking
4.4 The Routing Puck
4.5 Statistical Multiplexing
4.6 Minimizing State

5.0 Gigabit Applications to the Home
5.1 DVD Video
5.2 Mega e-mail attachments
5.3 DWDM caching
5.4 Multimedia Push and Always On Applications

6.0 Next Steps

7.0 Acknowledgements

8.0 References and Bibliography




To: ftth who wrote (889)1/8/2000 2:48:00 AM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1782
 
Dave, I thought that this article in the pile that you provided, by David Eisenberg of stupid networking fame, was sufficiently clear and apropos to what we've been discussing, that I would copy it here, too.

Here, Eisenberg discusses the same concepts covered in the paper written by Arnaud that we've been discussing.

From Americas Network Mag:

americasnetwork.com

"Canada brings fiber home"

CANARIE proposes gigabit Internet to the home while U.S. telcos diddle with DSL.

(fac: You've got to love that last part about diddling)

By David Eisenberg

hen Bill St. Arnaud tries to show earnest telco types
the leading edge, he might as well be talking Martian. When he
explains how he'll deliver gigabits via fiber to the home (FTTH)
for about the same cost as megabits via digital subscriber line
(DSL) or cable modem, their minds seem to be stuck in the
traffic jam at the intersection of IP and SS7.

In the midst of the distracting pseudo-battle between DSL and cable modems, it's
hard to remember that FTTH is still the broadband endgame. Despite the pall of
failure around early-1990s interactive TV, the supremacy of fiber has been clear
as glass for over a decade.

St. Arnaud, the mild-mannered director of network projects for the Canadian
Network for the Advancement of Research, Industry and Education (CANARIE;
www.canarie.ca) has not lost sight of the FTTH beacon. The newest CANARIE
project, CA*Net3, will throw away synchronous optical network (Sonet) and
asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) to become the world's first all-optical
Internet backbone. St. Arnaud believes this design can be extended into the home.
He proposes to throw away DSL and cable modems, too, bringing CA*Net 3's
all-optical multigigabit Internet into every Canadian home by 2005.

WDM in local networks
In long-haul networks, wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) has increased
fiber capacity by a couple of orders of magnitude in two short years. This year, a
single fiber will have throughput for 15 million calls — enough to handle the entire
U.S. busy hour.

But WDM has not yet hit the local loop. St. Arnaud thinks it's because established
providers are tangled in reuse of their own nets. Cable companies have cable
modems, so data service can run on existing, broadcast-oriented networks. Telcos
have DSL, which is backward-compatible with twisted pair. For both, the key
word is backward.

The same goes for transmission protocols. Sonet was designed for reliable voice
(connection-oriented) networks. ATM's goal was a single protocol for handling
voice, video and packet services. Neither anticipated Internet Protocol (IP).

Sonet and ATM become shaky when they're not propped up against legacy
networks. Sonet becomes unnecessary in an all-IP world, because packet
protocols like IP thrive even when lower layers are unreliable. ATM loses when
Internet telephony and audio-on-demand thrive, because more bandwidth and a
few IP tweaks promise to make real-time and streaming media scream.

To St. Arnaud, the whole idea of convergence is a backward-looking attempt to
preserve existing assets. He proposes a divergent, third residential network for
Internet traffic only, installed alongside telephone and cable feeds. Like the
CA*Net 3 backbone, it'll have only two layers: IP and WDM. Information over
light. It'll be a stupid network — cheap and simple, under-engineered,
over-provisioned and controlled at the edge by users.

Gigabits for microcents
Installation (right-of-way, trenching and conduit) represents the most cost. In a
100-km. metropolitan network, a conservative installation estimate is $4.3 million.
Routers and equipment to light the fiber might cost another $1.8 million. Using
today's 128-wavelength equipment, a single 48-fiber cable would serve 6,144
homes. Each home would have its own WDM wavelength that could be lit at 2.5
gigabits per second (OC-48). This computes to $1,000 per home.

The alternative, new hybrid fiber-coax (HFC) to support cable modem service,
delivers hundreds of times less, and costs half again more. Even retrofitting
existing cable to carry two-way data could cost $600 per home. DSL, somewhat
cheaper, delivers even less than HFC.

CANARIE's optics would meet residential equipment at an Ethernet interface.
The step from 2.5 gigabits (OC-48) to 1 gigabit Ethernet might seen wasteful. But
St. Arnaud points out that the next Ethernet evolution — 10 gigabit Ethernet —
just happens to match OC-192. Local and wide area nets would merge in yet
another fundamental simplification.

Why Canada can
In Canada, a lot of municipal fiber already exists, thanks to favorable regulatory
policy. But in the U.S., bean-counters of communications behemoths shy from
huge installation costs. They look at today's applications and figure that current
networks can be kludged to handle them.

Make way for high-definition Internet video on demand, or whatever truly
broadband application Canadian users dare discover. CA*Net 3 could make
Canada the center of the next Internet economic boom. Meanwhile, U.S. telcos
manage mawkish mergers, dither with DSL and forget fiber to the home. Look
north, young entrepreneur.