Sorry about that.
WORLD'S LEADING WIRELESS TELECOM TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPED ( Xinhua News Agency ) World's Leading Wireless Telecom Technology Developed
BEIJING (Dec. 29) XINHUA - A new wireless telecommunications technology two or three years ahead of international standard passed state appraisal here today.
According to an official from China's Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications, the SCDMA (synchronous code division multiplex access) wireless local loop system is the first leading wireless access technology developed by Chinese scientists and engineers. China owns the sole intellectual property rights for the technology.
New technologies adopted by the system such as SCDMA, smart antenna and software radio have received patents at home and abroad.
The system proved to have excellent and stable transmission quality during operation in the seven trial networks in large Chinese cities.
Experts believe the SCDMA system is best for rural areas, small- and medium-size cities, and suburbs that have difficulty in plugging in telecommunications lines.
Overseas forecasts say that 100,000 subscribers will be connected to wireless local loop systems by the end of the century, and more than 60 percent of them will be in developing countries.
China is projected to account for 20 percent of the world's wireless local loop subscription.
The new system will be put into mass production next June.
WORLD'S LEADING WIRELESS TELECOM TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPED., Xinhua News Agency, 12-29-1997.
CHINA TO ADOPT SCDMA TELECOM TECHNOLOGY ( Xinhua News Agency ) China to Adopt SCDMA Telecom Technology
BEIJING (Dec. 30) XINHUA - China has made progress in the telecommunications research of adopting new technology to connect switchboards with telephone users without wire.
According to the experts of China's Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications, the new technology called as SCDMA (synchronous code division multiplex access) system will save some 100 billion yuan annually in laying cables for telephone networks.
They said that the technology is two or three years ahead of the current telecom development in the world's telecommunications sector.
The SCDMA system is one of the key scientific research program included in China's Ninth Five-Year Plan (1996-2000) and it is convenient to operate in rural areas and urban suburbs, as well as in small- and medium-sized cities.
Since August this year, the system has been tried out in seven cities including Chongqing and Chengdu in Southwest China.
Experts said that the system has recently passed the assessment and will be put into production soon.
Copyright 1997 Xinhua News Agency (via Comtex). All rights reserved
CHINA TO ADOPT SCDMA TELECOM TECHNOLOGY., Xinhua News Agency, 12-30-1997.
Caged speed: the coming of S-CDMA. (Synchronous Code Division Multiple Access)(Cover Story) ( America's Network ) Ultrafast cable modems can pump data upstream over existing (and noisy) coax plant, giving cable providers a tremendous boost in the interactive data wars. But will providers put the 'old reliables' aside and rally around the technology upstarts?
The shoemakers don't make cable modems the way they used to. Moreover, the cable television industry is no longer content with the telcos' characterization of CATV's Internet access and Quality of Service (QoS) capabilities.
With at least two Silicon Valley start-ups (Terayon Corp. and Com21) coming out with lightning-fast, cell-based cable modems, the interactive data race appears ready for pitched battle. Along with Microsoft Corp.' s $1 billion investment in Comcast Corp., plus the news that @Home Network will go public as CATV's most aggressive cable-based Internet service provider (ISP), it's hard not to sense the rumbling of a new broadband war. But will the cable industry compete effectively against the telcos for high capacity, data-oriented Internet customers? Do they have the right tools and the right networks? Can they bet on effective but Johnny-come-lately technology when the already established cable vendors have put lots of less than state-of-the-art cable modems out there? Stay tuned.
The broadband services race is changing, thanks to little startups inventing cheap, noise-resistant solutions for existing cable plant. As telcos tussle over the best means of broadband access - ADSL, ISDN, ATM to the desktop and others - cable companies already may have their pick of better technology that requires little or no network upgrade and makes sturdier economic sense to them and their customers (see sidebar, page 20).
"In my view, [the cable modem choice] is a no-brainer," says Tim Savageaux, telecom analyst and director of Robertson Stephens & Co., a San Francisco investment firm. "With @Home Network going public - and that will give you the market sentiment of how successful cable modems will be - we're talking about an order of magnitude difference between downloading data at 28 kbps for ordinary analog telco modems vs. multimegabits for cable modems." Because Internet users are already paying $20 a month for less-than-sterling telco-based Internet service, plus paying the cost of a second phone line and the modem itself, "cable is a much greater value proposition," Savageaux contends.
PERFORMANCE COUNTS
Although costing models are generally more complex, the cable industry is seeing a revolution in low-cost data transport. One upstart is Terayon, an Israeli-founded, California company with Japanese backing (from Sumitomo Corp.) that has trialed its high-speed cable modems at Urawa Cable Television in Japan (operated by Jupiter Telecom), and MSO sites in the United States and Asia. The trials use Terayon' s patented physical layer technology for the upstream path - Synchronous Code Division Multiple Access (SCDMA).
S-CDMA is a proprietary flavor of CDMA that's used over a 6 MHz band to pump as much as 54 Mbps of data upstream over "dirty" coax plant. Invented by Shlomo Rakib, president and chief technology officer of Terayon, and a former electronics researcher in the Israeli military, S-CDMA employs "direct sequence spread spectrum" technology to boost upstream transmission.
Some similarities with narrowband CDMA include the modulation technique for S-CDMA, which relies on unique, nonoverlapping codes to perform the spreading. function on each user's signal. Rakib further refined the idea to maintain a high degree of "orthogonality," he says, a term meaning no mutual interference, even when cable quality is extremely noisy.
"We synchronize all the signalS arriving at the headend and guarantee the orthogonality of the code," Rakib says. "The synchronous part of the access allows all users to together so that signals don't interfere with each other and can reach the head end more orthogonal to each other. This increases capacity without the noise levels going up."
Put a simpler way, in typical asynchronous CDMA systems, portions of the codes from different sources can over-hp, raising the noise level within the receiver and hence degrading capacity. By contrast, SCDMA synchronizes all of the cable modem units to the head-end. This permits each unit to spread its signal more effectively (orthogonally) with respect to other cable modems sharing the line. The result is more efficient channel utilization.
THE PROOF IS IN THE NOISE
The proof of Terayon's effectiveness is its apparently robust performance in noisy conditions. Unlike other traditional cable modems, which generally spec out at a 25 dB signal-to-noise ratio, Terayon's TeraPro S-CDMA modems have no signal to noise spec and can, therefore, operate in the high-noise portion of the upstream path, below 20 megahertz (the range of operation is between 5 MHz and 42 MHz).
"S-CDMA is less vulnerable to narrowband interference and, with error correction technology, the system can confront the noise," says Zaki Rakib, Shlomo's brother, collaborator and CEO of Terayon, who holds two Ph.D's in applied math and engineering. "The system operates at 14 Mbps (per channel) in each direction, which means around 60 megabits are available (including overhead) on five channels." He cites advantages over wireless narrowband (IS-95) CDMA: "In wireless systems you can' t synchronize or secure targets, because they aren't fixed. In addition, power balancing isn't an issue for us at all, because we're talking about fixed targets."
Terayon is evangelizing its early field thai results. According to the company, tests of untreated coax have shown that SCDMA modems can provide 98% or higher error-free performance in a 30,000-home system, even when subjected to extreme plant noise. The company claims (and early field trials seem to bear this out) that network operators can use Tera-Pro for high-capacity broadband services over pure two- way coax without upgrading to fiber. This in itself is exceptional, because 80% of existing cable plant is still coax and much of it is deemed "unusable" for two-way broadband data because of noisiness.
"What we offer is a way to get into the [Internet and interactive two-way data business] at reasonable cost," says John Hamburger, a Terayon spokesman. "The operators are already at a point where they' re upgrading as much as they can, but we allow operators to use our equipment [whether they've got pure coax or not] for high-capacity data as they upgrade to HFC. The bottom line is you don't need to put in fiber or high-pass filters. You don't need to put in gold-plated plant."
Nikos Theodosopoulous, vice president of UBS Securities, agrees in principle. "The trials [Terayon has] had indicate good performance and the initial customer feedback is positive," he says. "A lot of cable companies may not have the money or time to upgrade their networks [for two-way interactive broadband]. Terayon allows them to offer services over that portion of infrastructure they haven't upgraded and still provide robust performance."
AN INDUSTRY TIDAL WAVE
Terayon isn't alone. There's a tremendous interest in all kinds of innovative cable plant solutions, although consensus on the types of solutions remains in doubt, suggests Steve Craddock, vice president of new media development, Comcast (Philadelphia), one of the nation' s largest cable operators.
Craddock is also a member of MCNS, the Multimedia Cable Network System, a consortium of five leading network operators (including Comcast, Cox, Time Warner, TCI and Continental). Two years ago, MCNS created specs for a two-way cable modem system that is now considered much less than state of the art; it uses a QPSK (Quadrature Phase Shift Keying, essentially a TDMA technology) -compliant technology (but not S-CDMA) for the upstream path. Craddock, among others, acknowledges that MCNS specs could present problems for Terayon and other non-compliant vendors.
"We're not looking for proprietary modems," Craddock says. "We're looking for MCNS compliance; however, the process makes allowance for specifying advanced physical layers, like SCDMA." He says there' s hope: MCNS is expected to request updates for a second-generation advanced cable modem that may incorporate new technology like Terayon' s and others.
"Basically, we segment the [two-way cable modem] market into consumer and commercial," Craddock explains. "In the consumer market, we need modem interoperability quickly to drive cable modems to the point of sale and retail. In this case, you don't have to be sophisticated or complex, but just offer basic TCP/IP operation for assymetric data operations (e.g., consumers browsing the Internet, where data requests on the upstream path are much lower than the downstream path, where major downloads of data occur). That's about the way 90% of people would use cable-based data services, and that complies to the MCNS standard for variable length packets for the upstream path."
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DUBBED ITALIAN MOVIES
For commercial data and voice applications, however, the situation is more complex. Companies like Terayon and Com21 (Milpitas, Calif.) are offering very high capacity cell-relay-based cable modems.
Cells should not be confused with S-CDMA; they are different technologies. Cells (fixed-length packets) offer inherent advantages in terms of network management, QoS guarantees, robustness and higher capacity. "in commercial installations, you're less interested in driving [modems] through the point of sale," Craddock continues. "Sponsoring companies that operate cable networks would have more tolerance for buying a modem [that wouldn't be the same as everyone else's]," he believes. Moreover, "a commercial requirement would be more bandwidth upstream - you want symmetric flexibility. Also, you may need cell-based constant bit rate services (such as voice over IP telephony) rather than variable rate. Remember, voice over an ordinary [variable length frame] TCP/IP connection goes anywhere from a badly dubbed Italian movie to something really horrible. You don't want to get delays." By contrast, "ATM or cell relay modem solutions might be the real answer for commercial services," he notes.
Craddock pronounces Terayon and Com21's cell relay technology "very interesting" as an MSO prospect for two-way interactive cable services, especially for such applications as high-volume file transfers, corporate work-at-home applications, video conferencing and the like. He won' t, however, disclose an exact time frame for making any purchase decisions. Comcast, among other top MSOs, including Rogers Cable Systems (Toronto), are still evaluating new modem technologies and are reluctant to disclose their involvement in field trials or their exact plans for deployment over the next year.
Craddock, however, says this much: "Terayon uses S-CDMA for the physical layer and a cell relay-type protocol. The other technology developed by Com21 produces a cell relay-type modem which is MCNS compliant in the physical layer - QUAM (Quadrature Amplitude Modulation) down, QPSK up. Terayon isn't compliant 'up'; they're using S-CDMA." However, because MCNS is already talking about a way to define an advanced physical layer for two-way services, "Terayon has become very interesting for us. Its cell relay-based architecture is good for commercial applications, in our view; S-CDMA allows you to use a less-than-perfect upstream to transmit data, and it's much more forgiving than any QPSK modem."
COM21'S ROCKET SCIENCE
The contrast between Terayon's and other advanced technologies is startling, because several different ones may lead to the same high- capacity path. Com21, for example, started in 1994 (3Com owns an equity stake in the company), produces a high-end cable modem system that president Richard Fenner (a former president of AT&T Network Systems) describes as "cell-based technology that allows us to do constant bit rate voice, data and video."
From that standpoint, Com21 is bluechip in offering voice, and differs from Terayon's modem, which is for high-capacity data only. Fenner claims the Com21 system offers full network and element management, a controller headend and aggregated capacity upstream and downstream of 30 Mbps each way.
"We operate between 5 MHz and 42 MHz in slices of 1.82 megahertz, and we're using QPSK," Fenner says. "We have more capacity upstream or downstream than Terayon," a claim Terayon would dispute, given its aggregate claims of 54 Mbps and higher over five channels upstream.
Fenner, however, insists his company's modems are as resilient against noise as any on the market; Com21 has been tested. "We have a frequency agile system," he explains. "If a modem turns out to be in a noisy environment. the gets moved into a different frequency [between the 5 MHz and 42 MHz band]. Unlike modems like [Bay Networks' ] LANCity, we do forward error correction, so we can operate in a noisy environment without difficulty."
The most important aspect of the cable modem, however, is its ability to make money for customers by helping them deliver differentiated classes of service, Fenner adds. With shipments beginning this past April, and with expected revenues of $10 million by fourth quarter - 60% of it overseas (its biggest customer is Flanders, Belgium, a consortium that serves 2.1 million cable customers) - Fenner says that Com21 enables MSOs "to divide up their bandwidth. In our case, they can have 16 different levels of service and charge a different rate for each of those levels; they'll be able to offer service to the low-priced customer for around $25 (for constant on-line service) Dial-up ISPs are our competition in the low end - right up to commercial high-end customers."
For Terayon, the future also looks bright, but large-scale deployments are up for grabs. The company needs to make a business case for interactive data over existing (and cheaper) cable plant to large and small operators alike. It needs to prove itself in the field of big players - Motorola, for example, which already has significant market share; LANCity, with over 50,000 modems shipped; General Instrument, which offers internal telephone return-path modems and will offer standard two- way by early 1998; and Scientific-Atlanta, which also offers low-end telco return, to name a few.
Shipping commercially this month, Terayon claims it already has firm orders for 100,000 modems worldwide. But it has yet to find a foothold in the big-stakes world of U.S. MSOs - the politics and players of MCNS, in other words. "We are in active discussions with MCNS," says Denies Picker, Terayon's vice president of engineering, and a former cable products group director at Motorola. "There is mutual interest in finding a way for our technology to be adopted as a future advancement within MCNS. But it's hard to predict when and how that will happen."
Shlomo Rakib acknowledges that entry as a latecomer into the MCNS operator world is "a political process, and long process." While some experts wonder whether Terayon can make it ("This is a case in which the best may not finish first," says a Scientific-Atlanta observer), Rakib believes there is room for the best.
"Clearly, the MCNS specs are for well-maintained HFC plants," he says. "They're addressing a small segment of the overall market. "We've done a lot of work in terms of demonstrating the advantages of our modem, doing a lot of field trials, presenting them with the results of field trials, satisfying the question they raised; there are good chances that we will set a standard for an advanced PHI together with an MCNS message."
That's the hope, anyway. Notes Robertson Stephens analyst Tim Savageaux: "The cable modem world is much more up for grabs than the wireless world; operators want something that works, they don't have some religious bent for time division multiplexing or FDMA. Over time, if technology is compelling enough and allows the operator to do what they need, it stands a good chance of adoption."
COPYRIGHT 1997 Advanstar Communications Inc.
Caged speed: the coming of S-CDMA. (Synchronous Code Division Multiple Access)(Cover Story)., Vol. 101, America's Network, 07-15-1997, pp 16(6).
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