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To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (1901)8/16/1998 2:27:00 PM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 12823
 
Ken, you ask: >>If you have information about the current state of other fiber optic upgrades, I would like to hear from you.<<

The July Lightwave Magazine did a piece on TCI's buildout and upgrade strategies that fits your needs here to a "T" [no pun intended], listing technologies, locations and time frames.

broadband-guide.com:80/lw/broadband/broad798.html

Hiram, I think you'll enjoy this one too. It's posted below. Enjoy,

Frank C.
=========================
Broadband, July 1998

As prices fall, DWDM becomes the transparent choice

After more than a year of restructuring its cable holdings, broadly
deploying digital set-top boxes, but doing little in the way of
network upgrades, TCI Communications (Denver, CO) is gearing
up for an ambitious hybrid fiber/coaxial-cable (HFC) upgrade
program. One of the goals of the upgrade is to achieve
"end-to-end transparency" in the optical portion of its network.

Technology and market trends have given TCI increased
confidence in the market potential of high-speed data services and
"narrowcast" and "on-demand" digital video services. Thus, the
company's network engineering group has focused on developing
a highly scalable platform that can cost-effectively evolve to
support ever-higher penetration and usage levels for such services.

In the process of evaluating alternative architectures, Oleh
Sniezko, TCI's vice president of engineering and winner of the
1997 scte-sponsored Polaris Award for his work in the
fiber-optics field, became convinced that the best approach for
TCI was to deploy dense wavelength-division multiplexing
(DWDM) in its HFC networks.

While Sniezko had been considering such an approach for some
time, it was only recently, he says, that DWDM costs began to
decrease sufficiently to find a place in TCI's network design. The
main driver of these cost reductions is the intense demand for
DWDM technology for use in long-haul baseband digital-transport
networks to support today's explosion of data traffic. Although
HFC networks alone might not drive massive demand for DWDM
equipment, observed Sniezko, why not ride the rapid
cost-reduction curve driven by another segment of the
telecommunications industry?

The result of the marriage of DWDM and HFC networks,
according to a paper co-authored by Sniezko and Tony Werner,
TCI's executive vice president of engineering and technical
operations, is "end-to-end transparency" or "invisible hubs." TCI
has concluded this approach is the best fit with its business plan
and mix of cable holdings.

In the HFC architecture most commonly used during the past few
years by major multiservice organizations (MSOS), signals are
delivered from headends or primary hubs to secondary hubs via
1550-nm optics. At the hubs - which may also house Synchronous
Optical Network equipment as well as modems, routers, and
cache servers for high-speed data services - these 1550-nm
optical signals are converted to RF and then back to optical for
transport on 1310-nm lasers. The 1310-nm lasers serve perhaps
two neighborhood nodes apiece.

According to Sniezko, TCI began to reconsider this
1550-to-1310 approach after deploying it in Hartford, CT, where
the company simultaneously launched new digital video, voice, and
high-speed data services. The result, says Sniezko, was secondary
hubs that had mushroomed into large, expensive facilities.

By using DWDM, TCI will be able to greatly simplify its
secondary hubs (see figure), moving equipment such as routers
and servers back to the headend and eliminating the need for the
optical-to-RF-to-optical gear that would otherwise be needed at
these hubs to deliver narrowcast services. And because it will use
DWDM, a passive technology moving quickly down the cost
curve, to load up to eight packages of narrowcast quadrature
amplitude-modulated digital services onto a single fiber running
from the headend to each hub, TCI will also be able to achieve
savings in both fiber and electronics costs.

One trade-off in this approach is that nodes will either require
additional optical receivers or, if combined optically, will
experience a certain amount of carrier-to-noise degradation. Thus,
while greatly simplifying the hubs compared to more "traditional"
HFC designs, the TCI approach may involve somewhat more cost
and complexity at the node.

At a presentation in May of the paper he and Werner wrote,
Sniezko reported that in the few months since the paper was first
prepared, DWDM and 1550-nm optoelectronics prices had
declined by 10% to 20%, resulting in total incremental system cost
cuts of 5% to 10%. TCI anticipates that by the end of 1998, these
costs will undergo an additional 20% decline.

Though vendors say that employing DWDM on the return path
from hubs back to the headend is considerably more expensive
today than the more common "frequency-stacking" approach,
Sniezko is convinced that the former is the smarter long-term
move. It will provide more flexibility to accommodate future
upstream traffic growth or changes in upstream frequency
assignments.

According to Sniezko and other industry sources, current price
quotes for externally modulated narrowcast transmitters are
approximately $7500, with quotes for direct-modulated devices in
the $5000-to-$6000 range and falling.

In terms of narrowcast transmitters, Sniezko says TCI is planning
to initially deploy one unit per 10,000 homes, with plans to
incrementally add wavelength-specific transmitters as demand
warrants. The expectation is that eventually the mso may deploy a
dedicated narrowcast transmitter for each 1000 homes it reaches
with narrowcast services.

To date, TCI has awarded stand-alone projects that combine
1550-nm technology and DWDM to Harmonic Lightwaves and
antec for cable systems in Vancouver and Seattle, WA,
respectively. At present, both of these vendors employ direct
modulation in their 1550-nm narrowcast transmitters, whereas
several other vendors appear to be focusing on externally
modulated narrowcast devices.

TCI's DWDM rollout plans called for concept testing in May using
several hubs, followed by deployment this year of a basic DWDM
infrastructure capable of feeding HFC plant in TCI systems
passing 3.5 million homes.

Other MSOS to follow?

In terms of the domestic market, TCI may go it alone, at least in
the near term, in its pursuit of a combination 1550-nm/DWDM
architecture. One reason is that most other major MSOS are
much farther along than TCI in their upgrade plans, with a
substantial portion of their networks either fully upgraded or well
into their design phase based on other approaches to HFC
networks.

While most other large operators are pushing hard to get the bulk
of their networks upgraded by 2000, the large number of system
acquisitions and swaps that have occurred over the past few years
could extend the current period of heavy construction activity
through 2003. The fact that most of these newly acquired systems
will be integrated into existing clusters suggests that when they are
upgraded, they will employ the same basic architecture already
deployed in other, previously upgraded, portions of these clusters.

Nevertheless, at some point, these MSOS are likely to find that
their narrowcast services - especially bandwidth-hungry
video-on-demand (VOD) - will require additional capacity in their
1550-nm transport networks. In the early stages of VOD rollouts,
these MSOS may be able to load a certain amount of narrowcast
traffic on their existing 1550-nm transmitters, which in many cases
are being initially loaded with only 40 analog channels per
transmitter. This, however, is likely to support only a few
percentage points of penetration for VOD services. Once this
penetration level is exceeded, these MSOS will need to add
capacity to their 1550-nm networks.

Because they have already deployed fiber-rich backbones and
traditional HFC networks (i.e., full-blown hubs feeding nodes via
1310-nm lasers), these MSOS will face different cost equations
than TCI in terms of the relative value of DWDM solutions.

For example, instead of using DWDM for narrowcast services,
these MSOS may choose to use some of their dark fiber to
transport up to four 200-MHz narrowcast digital tiers on
broadcast-capable 1550- nm lasers. This approach could support
VOD penetration up to 20% or even higher. This suggests that
these MSOS may not have a compelling need to adopt DWDM
solutions in the foreseeable future, unless VOD shows itself to be a
very popular high-penetration service.

On the other hand, if the price and performance of DWDM
systems continue to improve dramatically, as TCI expects, these
other MSOS could begin to shift towards a DWDM migration
path even if VOD and other narrowcast traffic does not lead them
to physically run out of fiber capacity on their 1550-nm transport
links.




To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (1901)8/18/1998 6:05:00 PM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Respond to of 12823
 
GI Wins Contract To Upgrade Buckeye Cablevision
System GI's Gallium Arsenide Technology Selected
By Buckeye Cablevision For Toledo, Ohio System

August 18, 1998

HORSHAM, Pa., Aug. 17 /PRNewswire/ via
NewsEdge Corporation -- General Instrument
Corporation (NYSE: GIC) announced today that
Buckeye Cablevision has awarded GI the Toledo,
Ohio system upgrade. The 1,700-mile plant will be
upgraded from 450 MHz to 860 MHz two-way
capability during the next three to four years using
GI's Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) hybrid technology.

The system benefits of using GaAs MESFET hybrid
technology in GI's STARLINE(R) 2000 series
amplifiers include: improved distortion performance,
higher compression point, lower noise figure,
upgrades with reduced amplifier respacing, greater
channel loading, greater reliability, lower installation
costs, and reduced maintenance due to fewer
actives, and lower cost of ownership.

Buckeye CableSystem's Toledo upgrade is
designed to provide extended bandwidth and
two-way capability to support Buckeye's new
advanced service offerings including digital
television and high-speed Internet access and a
host of other communications services. To enable
these new services GI will provide Buckeye with its:
OmniStar(R) fiber optic transmitters, SG 2000 opto-
electronic nodes, GaAs Enhanced STARLINE(R)
2000 Series of amplifiers, CFT 2200 advanced
analog set-tops, digital headend and GI
SURFboard(R) network hub and cable modems. GI
will also supplement its product offering with its
NETadvantage(TM) support services including:
quality conformance design checking; downstream
plant sweep, balance, and activation; and testing
and certification of the upstream path.

"Upgrading to GaAs technology will enable
Buckeye to increase revenue by adding more
channels and offering new subscriber services that
require increased signal levels, expanded
bandwidth, and two way capability," said Bick
Remmey, Senior Vice President and General
Manager of GI's Transmission Network Systems
(TNS) business unit. "Because Gallium Arsenide
amplifiers significantly improve network
performance, fewer actives are required in the
network, which translates to lower design,
installation, maintenance, and operating costs for
Buckeye."

General Instrument has also supplied
SURFboard(R) modems which provide Internet
access at connection speeds up to 50 times faster
than a traditional 28.8 kbps modem, giving
operators a distinct advantage in the growing
Internet Service Provider (ISP) market and
subscribers the capability to quickly download
complex multimedia content.

"We selected General Instrument based upon its
proven track record and full range of products and
services. GI can offer us the latest technology, high
reliability and support, to create a highly reliable,
two-way network that can handle the latest
broadband technology," said Jim Brown, Buckeye's
Director of Engineering. "With our new two-way
network, subscribers will be able to choose from a
greater variety of services, including change
advanced video services, Internet access and data
options."

Buckeye Cablevision, Inc., is the largest cable firm
operating in the Toledo area, with approximately
130,000 customers in Toledo and 17 of its
contiguous suburbs and adjacent townships. With
the systems upgrades, Buckeye

CableSystem(C), as the firm is known for marketing
purposes, will increase its offering from the current
60 channels to 126 analog channels initially,
including 31 digital audio channels. Bandwidth is
being reserved for digital video channels in the
future.

Buckeye was the first cable company in the
country to implement FM fiber optics to deliver
entertainment television and data transmission from
the system headend to three scattered hub sites for
delivery to homes. It also was among the early
industry leaders in the use of AM fiber optics to
provide a feed-and-return link between the headend
and hub sites.

Buckeye, founded in 1966, is believed to be the
oldest continuously owned large cable system in
the country. It is the 73rd largest system, and the
39th largest MSO. It also operates systems in
Sandusky, Ohio, and Monroe Michigan. Buckeye is
a wholly owned subsidiary of Blade
Communications, Inc., a Toledo-based firm which
also owns newspapers, telephone companies, and
broadcasting television stations.

General Instrument Corporation (NYSE: GIC) is a
leading worldwide provider of integrated and
interactive broadband access solutions, teaming
with its business partners to lead the convergence
of the Internet, telecommunications and video
entertainment industries.

Visit General Instrument at their Web Site _
gi.com

SOURCE General Instrument Corporation

/CONTACT: Media, Sharon Corbitt, Director,
Communications, 215-323-1873, or e-mail,
scorbitt@gi.com, or Investors, Dario Santana, VP,
Investor Relations, 215-323-1213, or e-mail,
dsantana@gi.com, both of General Instrument/
/Web site: gi.com (GIC)

[Copyright 1998, PR Newswire]