(BPON) NCTIA Conference June 2005 Jas Sangha Marketing Manager Tellabs Proprietary 2 Agenda > PON Standards > Acceptance > Technology > Video Delivery Options > Summary
Tellabs Proprietary 3 Why FTTP? Why Now? Service Provider Standards Regulation Investment Revenue Churn Declining Revenue Cost Maturity Tellabs Proprietary 4 PON Standards - Overview BPON EPON GPON Standard ITU G.983 IEEE802ah ITU G.984 Data Packet Cell Size 53bytes 1518 bytes 53 to 1518 bytes Maximum Wavelength 622 downstream; 155 upstream Symmetric 1.2Gbps Configurable 2.4Gbps downstream 1.2 Gbps Upstream Traffic Modes ATM Ethernet ATM Ethernet or TDM Voice ATM VoIP or TDM TDM Video 1550nm overlay 1550 nm overlay Either over RF or IP ODN Classes Supported A, B and C A and B A, B and C Max PON Splits 32 16 64 Standardization Commercialized & Deployed Standard under raticiacation Standard Ratified Tellabs Proprietary 5 PON Basics
> FTTP > PON Passive Optical Network > APON ATM PON > BPON Broadband PON > GPON Gigabit PON > OLT Optical Line Termination > ONT Optical Network Termination > ODN Optical Distribution Network Tellabs Proprietary 6 Broadband PON (BPON) > ITU G.983 ATM-PON approved standards: > G.983.1(1998): optical layer, transmission convergence layer, and ATM layer for BPON systems > G.983.2 (2000): operations channel protocol and message set (OMCI) between the BPON OLT and the ONT > G.983.3 (2001): alternative wavelength plan including additional wavelength band for downstream video broadcast or for bi-directional transport of data using DWDM > 155 symmetrical to 622 Mb/s asymmetrical shared by homes for voice and data > Guaranteed Quality of Service through ATM: CBR, VBRnrt, VBRrt, UBR > FSAN committee as a major source of input (Service Provider oriented) Tellabs Proprietary 7 Carrier Acceptance PON Source: FSAN > North America > Verizon > SBC > Qwest > Bell Canada
> International > NTT > British Telecom > Deutsche Telecom > France Telecom > Telefonica
> Sprint > CenturyTel > Citizens/Frontier > TDS
> Telstra > Swiss Com > SingTel > Chunghwa > Eire
Tellabs Proprietary 8 Downstream 1490 nm Upstream 1310 nm 1490nm/1310nm, 1550nm Video (l) Data (AAL5) POTS (AAL1,2) Voice & Data Voice/Data & Video Optical Splitter 1x32 Or Cascade Optical Couplers (WDM) Video 1550 nm Voice and Data @ 622 Mbps Video 1310 nm 1490 nm Downstream Upstream 1550 nm Digital TV Analog TV HD/VOD 550 MHz 860 MHz 42 MHz Voice and Data @ 155 to 622 Mbps
OLT + GW
FSAN Standard; ITU G.983 ONT EDFA (Erbium Doped Fiber Amplifier) Tellabs Proprietary 9 How Does BPON Work? ONT ONT ONT A B C A B C + GRANT A B C + GRANT ONT ONT ONT A B C A Upstream: Time Division Multiple Access Downstream: Time Division Multiplex Downstream: 622 Mbps @ 1490nm Upstream: 155 Mbps @ 1310nm Outside Plant: Optical Distribution Network Customer Premise: ONT (Optical Network Termination) CO, Feeder: OLT (Optical Line Termination) ATM switch, PSTN, Internet Services to user: POTS, Internet Access Passive Optical Splitter Tellabs Proprietary 10 RT 1:x Passive pticas Splitters OC3 OC12 32 Homes 622 Mbps 155 Mbps VIDEO Central Office 20 km / 10-25 dB loss BPON Network Overview OLT + GW Video Data PSTN OLT Up to 20kms (12.4 miles) Tellabs Proprietary 11 Video Selection > Video considerations > RF vs. IP > Bandwidth > Digital services > HD > Local control ability to add applications > Off air decisions > VOD > Local Television Stations > Set Top Box options
Tellabs Proprietary 12 Video over RF > Dedicated 5+Gbps for broadcast TV, including HDTV > FSAN Standard (1550nm wavelength) > Both G.983 (BPON) and G.984 (GPON) standards include this provision > Delivers digital video content over a single connection (fiber) > Provides competitive edge over cable companies S u b s c r i b e r s Video Advanced Video Path 5Gbps per customer Voice HSI Video 622Mbps (DS) Voice HSI 155Mbps (US) N e t w o r k
Tellabs Proprietary 13 Video over RF > BPON OLTs serve Voice, HSI and CATV video > Can deliver video from a RF video head end > Utilizes 1550nm transport for analog and digital video services out of the Coax connector on the ONT > Leverages mature CATV infrastructure > No home wiring re-work > Can be deployed with or without a set top box > Channel switching at the STB or TV > US RBOC purchasing of this approach will improve component cost (FTTP) Tellabs Proprietary 14 Amplifier 1550nm Optical TV ONT ONT FTTP CO WDM Combiner OLT Headend CATV line-up (with or without Set Top Box) CATV line-up (Analog or Digital, 50-850Mhz) Transmitter (E/O), Amplifier Video over RF Solution No Need To Re-Evaluate Bandwidth Fire and Forget Tellabs Proprietary 15 RF Video Architecture 1550 nm 1550 nm Optical Transmitter OLT EDFA C W D M Central Office 1490 nm 1310 nm ONT STB Voice Residence Interactive Network Adapter 70-130 MHz QPSK Data RF Video RF Adapter Tellabs Proprietary 16 RF Return Adapter STB Voice Stand alone RF Adapter Data RF Triplexer RF Adapter RF 1310 nm 1490 nm 1550 nm STB Voice Integrated RF Adapter Data RF Triplexer 1310 nm 1490 nm 1550 nm RF Adapter Tellabs Proprietary 17 RF Video > Pros: > Mature technology (Available Today) > Lower overall costs > High level of interactivity > HD and VoD today > Vendors are big industry players > Does not impact data bandwidth to customers or transport network > Cons: > Cant share Head End with Video over DSL > Me Too service offering? > Limited ability to build vertical service offerings Tellabs Proprietary 18 IP Video Network SONET Or GigE Transport Exchange Exchange ADSL2+ Backoffice Network (Service Creation and Billing IP Video Headend FTTN FTTP Tellabs Proprietary 19 In-Band IPTV (SDV) > Deliver video from a new or legacy IP video head end > Supports copper and fiber infrastructure > Utilizes the in-band 622Mbps pipe for IP video content delivery over the Ethernet port on the ONT > Converged network for voice video and data Tellabs Proprietary 20 BPON Summary >Standards-based, end-to-end solution >Mature and deployed technology >Scalable ONT solutions >Flexible Video offering, RF or IP >Time to Market
>Carrier Acceptance and Deployments >Largest carriers in NA have standardized on PON >Large carrier acceptance leads to volumes cost reductions