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Romanian cable operator chooses ECI Telecom for 100 Gbps

ECI Telecom says that Romanian cable operator RCS & RDS will deploy ECI’s Apollo Optimized Multi-Layer Transport (OMLT) platforms to support 100-Gbps transmission.

The OMLT deployment will upgrade a 700-km route from Oradea to Bucharest. The RCS & RDS network per-channel capacity will grow from 10 Gbps to the 100-Gbps figure to connect core routers along the route. ECI Telecom’s LightSoft Network Management System will provide oversight.

RCS & RDS serves more than 4 million subscribers, making it the largest Romanian cable and Internet provider. It will use its upgraded capabilities to support its offering of quad-play services (voice, data, video, and mobile). The operator has been an ECI Telecom customer for more than 10 years (see, for example, "ECI tapped to expand Romania cable operator's Eastern European network").

"The ability to implement 100G in our current network is a confirmation of our continuous effort to invest in cutting-edge communications solutions,” commented Valentin Popoviciu, development manager, RCS & RDS. “For more than 10 years, ECI has been an innovative and experienced strategic partner that helped us provide our customers with exceptional services. The move to 100G will enable RCS & RDS to better meet the needs of its customer base by quickly reacting to current and future bandwidth demands and reliably offering the highest capacity services available on the market today, as well as the ability to approach new markets."

"With minimal changes to its existing infrastructure, RCS & RDS increased tenfold the available bandwidth to its customers. This new 100G network enables the company to remain competitive and offer the latest next-generation services and applications to its customers, without major investments in capex or opex," added Yoav Gazelle, head of sales & marketing for Europe & Americas, ECI Telecom.

Cisco supplies MPLS routers for Australian National Broadband Network

Cisco says that it has signed a contract worth up to $38 million over five years to supply Multi-Protocol Layer Switching (MPLS) on Cisco routers and firewalls to support NBN Co's National Connectivity Network (NCN). The NCN is part of the Australian National Broadband Network (NBN) effort.

The NCN will help activate and assure services as homes and businesses connect onto the NBN. The Cisco equipment will serve in depot, aggregation nodes, and other “key locations” to support the Operations Support System (OSS) and Business Support System (BSS) platforms, signaling, and timing. Cisco says it will begin work on the five-year project immediately.

"We are pleased to extend our relationship with Cisco as a supplier of data center infrastructure to include the supply of a high-performing, highly secure network foundation composed of switches, routers and firewalls to support our NCN," said NBN Co's executive general manager of network architecture and technology, Tony Cross.

"This equipment will enable communication between NBN Co's centralized operational staff and IT systems with the fiber, fixed wireless, and satellite equipment situated at various locations across Australia. The remote control of this equipment, via the NCN, will allow new services to be activated and faults to be diagnosed and repaired quickly and efficiently across Australia," Cross added.

This is the second aspect of the NBN that will involve Cisco. A consortium led by the company was awarded the contract to provide NBN Co with a data center platform. The consortium includes EMC and VMware.

Alcatel-Lucent 2Q12 GPON port shipments top 1 million

Alcatel-Lucent (Euronext Paris and NYSE: ALU) says it shipped more than 1 million ports of GPON gear in its fiscal second quarter, a company record. Increased demand in in China and the U.S. helped spur the jump in shipments, according to the company.

The company asserts the shipments signal that Alcatel-Lucent is running ahead of the GPON market as a whole. The shipments to China and the U.S. are emblematic of the success Alcatel-Lucent has had globally with its Intelligent Services Access Manager (ISAM)-based GPON offering, the company says. For example:

    In APAC, Alcatel-Lucent says it is the leading supplier of GPON systems to China Telecom and China Unicom.
    In the Americas too, Alcatel-Lucent supplies GPON equipment to Verizon, as well as to Oi  in Brazil and Telmex in Mexico.
    In Europe, Alcatel-Lucent says it is now making inroads into Eastern Europe, with a contract award from Vivacom of Bulgaria the most recent example.
    In the Middle East and Africa, Alcatel-Lucent points to a win with Telkom South Africa as proof of its progress.

Overall, Alcatel-Lucent says its ISAM family has been deployed by more than 250 service providers globally, including more than 160 FTTH projects that include EPON, GPON, and point-to-point fiber.

Making the jump to 100G

By Sam Bucci, Alcatel-Lucent

In the past two years, the number of 100G transport platforms on the market has grown from one to nearly a dozen. With this much-needed leap in bandwidth capacity here to stay, service providers are now asking, “How do I implement 100G in a scalable, cost-effective way?”

How far ahead do service providers have to stay to keep up with the world’s endless appetite for bandwidth? While many continue to deploy 10- and 40-Gbps transport platforms, growing numbers are looking at 100G to give them a longer-lasting bandwidth boost.

According to most service providers, bandwidth demand is growing by at least 33% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) each year. Streaming video is expected to make up some 58% of all Internet traffic by 2014.1 More than 20 billion mobile devices are likely to be in use by 2020.2 And in just two years, more than 80% of all new software will be available as a cloud service, which will require the adoption of all-new content delivery and storage models.3

Some service providers have said they’ll need to double their capacity every 18 months to keep pace.4 (See figure below.) Other sources estimate that the total amount of content passing through the world’s networks will increase from 800,000 petabytes in 2009 to 35 zettabytes in 2020—meaning that by the end of this decade, service providers will need an astonishing 44 times the capacity they have today.5

 

A growing market
To deliver the capacity operators need, technology vendors have been actively working to develop commercial 100-Gbps network systems. Alcatel-Lucent opened the field in 2007 with the industry’s first field trial of 100G optical transmission. As 100G technology has matured, several vendors have brought such platforms to market. Today there are at least 10 different 100G platforms available.

The momentum behind commercial 100G is good news for service providers who have been waiting for the technology to mature before upgrading and evolving their networks. With 100G now widely available, they can finally start building capacity with the confidence that this technology will be the standard for years to come.

Different options for different needs
Every network has its own unique set of requirements—which means no single flavor of 100G will suit all applications. Service providers need choice and flexibility as they look to evolve, starting with options for both the IP and optical portions of their networks. These include:

    100-Gigabit Ethernet (GbE) service routing interfaces that can be deployed anywhere in the transport network -- in the metro, at the service edge and in the core. In some networks, higher-speed core router or data center interconnection is the critical requirement. In others, 100GbE links provide headroom for handling high traffic volumes within the metro or can increase efficiency at the service edge of the IP network.
    Single-carrier 100G coherent optical technologies that couple coherent detection with advanced digital signal processing algorithms and sophisticated modulation formats to increase symbol rate and improve wavelength performance. Platforms that benefit from this approach possess the capacity to simultaneously handle native 10G, 40G, and 100G wavelengths—enabling service providers to easily migrate their network infrastructures to ever-higher wavelength capacities without sacrificing performance.

100G marks an inflection point in the evolution of both IP and optical transport networks. Although different service providers will have different objectives for migrating to 100G, they have the flexibility to start their transitions in one domain or the other—or proceed incrementally in both—based on the best approach for their particular network architecture and strategy.

Planning is key
To monetize their networks, service providers need the most flexible, efficient, and cost-effective means of transporting network traffic. With this in mind, a number of complex variables must be taken into account when planning 100G deployments. These include:

    fiber type
    distance between sites
    topology
    placement of amplifiers, electrical regenerators, and add/drop sites
    platform scalability
    capex and opex
    total cost of ownership (i.e., the need to reduce equipment footprint, power consumption, truck rolls, etc.).

The challenge is to achieve the right balance across these elements without going so far as to compromise one for the sake of another—for example, by reducing line rates or wavelength capacity on some spans or installing additional regeneration sites, all of which can diminish overall performance and undercut the value of the 100G technology investment.

The latest 100G systems on the market address these issues by extending unregenerated reach to 2,000 km or more. Although such distances typically suggest ultra-long-haul applications, a more common use may actually be in highly meshed regional and metro networks, which have frequently constrained service providers to 40G or even 10G wavelengths due to the variability and unpredictability of impairments in the optical infrastructure.

Enhanced 100G performance broadens the addressable market for 100G while improving network capacity and lowering costs. Despite the increasing number of applications available to service providers, however, migration plans still need to be well thought out and as complete as possible.

Going beyond 100G
While most service providers are either deploying or making plans to move to 100G, the unabated growth in traffic demand will soon push them toward even higher rates. (In fact, many early adopters of 100G—financial institutions and data center operators, for example—have already reached the point where 100G is no longer enough.) As such, many vendors are starting to think about what might be next—in a world after 100G.

Knowing that bandwidth demand will continue to climb, service providers will need to make sure their 100G networks can evolve elegantly into higher-bandwidth infrastructures down the road. But most approaches to higher rates require substantial investments in network equipment or fiber routes. Overhauling their entire infrastructure every few years is clearly not a viable option; today’s 100G platforms have to be both scalable and backward-compatible.

Leveraging recent advances in optical componentry, processing, and chip design, commercially available 400G chipsets have been developed for existing WDM platforms that are fully compatible with 100G networks. The result in one case is a high-bandwidth 100G system that extends reach by 50% while reducing power consumption and equipment footprint by more than 30%. When equipped for 400G transport, the same system delivers a fourfold increase in traffic payload rate and module density.

Chipsets for 400G from more vendors will soon arrive on the marketplace. Ideal devices will be in-house designs optimized for specific vendor products rather than the diverse range of potential applications (and performance compromises) typically required by merchant silicon. For service providers, these in-house chipsets will not only arrive on the market sooner, but will deliver improved performance over virtually any fiber infrastructure or topology. More importantly, they will provide a smooth evolutionary path that allows them to leverage their existing investments and migrate to higher rates at their own pace—meaning they can stay ahead of bandwidth demand while increasing capacity in a way that makes sense for them.

Moving forward, the need for more bandwidth will have a profound impact on every aspect of service providers’ operations. There’s a lot at stake. But with 100G technology more accessible than ever—and with recent advancements setting the stage for even greater capacity—the time to act is most definitely now.

References
1. Informa Telecoms and Media, 2011.
2. Strategy Analytics.
3. Bell Labs: Value of Cloud for a Virtual Service Provider, 2011.
4. Telegeography: International Bandwidth Deployments, 2002–2016.
5. IBM Software: Delivering a New ROI for Communications, 2012.

Sam Bucci is vice president and general manager of Alcatel-Lucent’s Terrestrial Optics Product Unit.

Alcatel-Lucent wins fiber-optic network contract from China Telecom

Alcatel-Lucent  says that it will supply optical transport equipment to China Telecom as part of an upgrade to the carrier’s fiber-optic data network. The upgrade will also support China Telecom’s activities within the “Broadband China” program, a national initiative to deliver high-speed broadband connections to more than 250 million urban and rural homes by 2015.

The system’s provider previously received a contract to provide China Telecom with fiber to the home (FTTH) equipment for the Broadband China effort (see “Alcatel-Lucent to expand broadband FTTH network for China Telecom”).

China Telecom chose Alcatel-Lucent Shanghai Bell to supply 70% of its requirements for 10G converged Optical Transport Network (OTN) and WDM technology platforms. Alcatel-Lucent Shanghai Bell will supply the 1830 Photonic Service Switch (PSS) under terms of the contract. The 1830 PSS will support 10-Gbps traffic, while providing China Telecom with the ability to transmit 40- and 100-Gbps wavelengths as well.

The upgrade program aims to increase the capacity of China Telecom’s optical transport network as well as extend it to all of China’s major cities. The expansion will enable China Telecom to reach more consumers and businesses with its fixed-line broadband access network, and increase the availability of both 3G- and WiFi-based wireless broadband services throughout the country.

Said Rajeev Singh-Molares, president, Asia Pacific for Alcatel-Lucent, “Chinese consumers and businesses are demanding increasingly sophisticated services requiring more and more bandwidth. As importantly, China has set aggressive targets to expand broadband availability to underserved segments of the society. Our optical technology will enable China Telecom to address these critical demands cost-effectively today, and lay the groundwork for the future expansion and acceleration of their network to support 100G transport in the future. China Telecom is to carry out large-scale deployment of 100G in the coming years, and we feel very confident that Alcatel-Lucent will enhance our partnership with China Telecom by leveraging our advanced solutions and extensive experience.”

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