Title: BUSINESS CONTRASTS BETWEEN HFC AND xDSL
1BUSINESS CONTRASTS BETWEEN HFC AND xDSL Naval
Ravikant Manager, Strategic Planning _at_Home
Network June, 1998
2BROADBAND ACCESS LINES RACE TO THE
FUTUREMajority of Deployments will be
Hybrid-Fiber Coax and Digital Subscriber Lines
- Cable deployments are leading the way
- 15,000-20,000 ADSL lines are installed in North
America, whereas over 200,000 cable modem lines
are installed
Source Americas Network Magazine, IDC, Merrill
Lynch
3TECHNOLOGY REVIEW xDSLDSL Bypasses LEC Switch
and Uses Full 1MHz of Bandwidth
- Physical layer protocol for data-over copper
- Extends from subscriber premises to DSL Access
Multiplexer (DSLAM) located in Central Office.
Bypasses LEC Switch, unlike ISDN - Filters in switch allow only 3-4kHz for voice,
limiting analog modems - DSLAMs needed in every CO, whereas one analog
modem bank can serve entire LATA - Uses full 1MHz of bandwidth
- Unlike T1, doesnt need repeaters every 3-6000
feet and causes less bundle interference - Discrete Multi-Tone line code breaks signal into
256 adaptive 4k chunks, trading complexity and
expense for reliability and rate-adaptivity vs.
Carrier-less Amplitude Modulations single 1MHz
signal - Asymmetric solutions send more aggregate data,
taking advantage of lower loop clustering and
crosstalk at edge of network - Type Range Up Down Pairs Application
- HDSL 12,000 1.5Mb 1.5Mb 2 T-1 replacement
- SDSL 12,000 768kbps 768kbps 1 SOHO T-1
- A / RADSL 18,000 16-640kbps 1.5-6Mbps 1 Residentia
l, passband - VDSL 1-4000 1-2Mbps 13-52Mbps 1 FTTC
Source _at_Home study, Americas Network Magazine
4TECHNOLOGY REVIEW DATA-OVER-HFCModems Leverage
Fat Coax Pipe to Set-Up Always-On Ethernet LAN
- Downstream programming begins at 50MHz, with
5MHz-42MHz reserved for upstream communication.
Each channel occupies 6MHz - For data-over-cable, one channel in 50-750MHz
range carries signals downstream, and one in
5-42MHz carries signals upstream - Downstream capacity is 36Mbps using 256 QAM and
upstream is 10Mbps using 16QAM or QPSK (more
robust scheme is needed since signals combine
higher in the network, increasing vulnerability
to interference) - Bandwidth is shared, but since it does not need
to be reserved (a la dialup modems), overbooking
ratios are very good - from 10-201 - Bursty nature of data traffic means that
high-speed shared connections are often
preferable to mid-speed dedicated ones - CableLabs tests show that performance degradation
does not begin until 200-400 users per node are
simultaneously accessing the network
Source _at_Home study, Americas Network Magazine
5BOTH TECHNOLOGIES ARE READY FOR PRIME
TIMECarrier Willingness to Invest in Deployment
is the Real Constraint
- All major Cable MSOs have begun deployment of
cable modem services, most as part of _at_Home or
Roadrunner, at prices ranging from 35/month to
60/month - 5 RBOCs and 19 CLECs have plans to begin
deployment of xDSL this year, at prices ranging
from 60-150 for residences and 100-1000 for
businesses - Cable modem technology, provisioning, deployment
and scaling work! - Over 200,000 full service paying customers
- Security is a non-issue for residential subs.
Encryption at layer 2-7 plus insecurity of
Internet limit issue - Shared bandwidth is not a problem with 1000 homes
/ node. (1000 homes x 10 penetration x 30
simultaneous online x 15 transferring data -
tests indicated 200-400 supported users / node) - Can add more channels or split node further as
needed - DSL technology has been tested in labs, trials,
and HDSL deployments - HDSL already composes 60 of T-1 deployments
- G.lite and UAWG addressing standards issues - DMT
wins over CAP - Modems offered by 30 vendors
- Provisioning, loop testing and scaling issues
still need to be addressed
6BROADBAND TECHNOLOGIES FAVOR DIFFERENT
MARKETSDSL Naturally Favors Business Whereas HFC
Naturally Favors Residential
- DSL Attributes Favors
- Secure Loop Business
- Dedicated loop bandwidth Business
- Symmetric service (H, S) Business
- Uses existing ISDN equipment (I) Business
- Baseband (H, S, V) Business
- Asymmetric Service (A, V) Residential
- Passband (A) Residential
- HFC Attributes Favors
- Can integrate video / data signals Residential
- Costs decline with high penetration Residential
- Asymmetric Service (Telco return) Residential
- Symmetric Service (2-way) Business
- Close to 60 of current T-1 lines are HDSL based
- Only 17 of carriers will deploy ADSL to
residential users soon, and only 4 will deploy
HDSL to residences - Fear of T-1 cannibalization and high frequency
crosstalk will lead RBOCs to choose a high price,
low penetration service model
Source IDC
7COSTS BROADBAND MODEMSSilicon Follows Moores
Law and Will be a Small Factor Over Time
- Cable MCNS standards initiative will keep modems
cheap and interoperable - Similar efforts underway on xDSL side (MSDSL)
- DMT v. CAP debate settled - DMT will lead
deployments - Fast DSPs means DSL and 56k modem can be
implemented in software on the same box - Cable modems have 1-2 year head start on price /
performance curve - Some DSL deployments (20-30 HDSL, 10 ADSL)
will require midspan units to bridge distance
limitations
Source _at_Home Estimates
8COSTS xDSL LOOP TESTING AND PROVISIONINGReaching
the Last 40 of Households Becomes Very Expensive
- About 40 of Homes are further than 18k feet, run
through bridge taps or loading coils, are served
by DLCs, or are served out of a bundle carrying a
T1 signal - Installs are expensive - provisioning one circuit
doesnt tell you much about adjacent circuits - Crosstalk between adjacent T-1 lines or other DSL
lines causes interference - Line splices and loading coils that trap the
signal above 4khz prevent DSL - Range limits of 12-18 kilofeet from Central
Office. 25 of homes are outside of this range in
urban / suburban areas, up to 50 in rural areas - Current loop testing and provisioning systems
only test the voice frequency spectrum - 25 of homes are served by DLCs, which have less
space and power to hold DSL equipment - 100-150 per average install, 500 for
difficult installs - Example - US West charges 395 for average loop
install
9COSTS DATA-OVER-CABLE PLANT UPGRADESRebuild
Costs Vary by Market and Application
- Cable MSOs must upgrade plant to 2-way, with
small node sizes - Entire neighborhood must be upgraded
simultaneously - Opportunity cost of invested capital
- Rural System upgrades are more expensive
- Upgrade needed for digital TV telephony
- Marginal cost of adding a subscriber is low
- Rebuild costs / home passed (avg. suburban
system) - Homes passed / optical node 300 600 1200 2000
- Fiber overlay on coax trunk 150 80 40 22
- Optical / return-path amplifiers 5 4 3 2
- Assumes no coax plant rebuild required to
overcome channel lock -
Source _at_Home Estimates
10BARRIERS TO MASS DATA-OVER-HFC DEPLOYMENTS
- Significant plant upgrades required
- Short-term amplifier-only strategy can only
support low take rates - Older systems need the most work
- Telco-return implementations do not have a quick
enough payback - Debt-load can make it difficult to raise cash -
ROI expectations high - Plant is also being upgraded for other services
- Interactive TV revisited
- Video channel capacity
- Conventional, lifeline telephony
- Selling applications vs. pipes
- Long term, people want IP dial-tone, but carriers
are used to selling applications and services,
not connections - Provisioning / Install needs to be easier
- MCNS compatible, USB plugnplay
- Lack of ubiquity
- Constrains retail modem sales
- Prevents mass deployment of packet telephony,
tele-commuting, etc. - Security and shared bandwidth problems are red
herrings - Security available at higher layers
- All bandwidth is shared at some point
11BARRIERS TO MASS xDSL DEPLOYMENTS
- Complex provisioning and line certification
issues - Bridge taps, loading coils, DLCs, range
limitations, etc... - No testing systems in place
- Dinosaur distractions
- Long distance telephony
- Video aspirations
- T-1, leased-line business
- Unrealistic expectations
- Serving all customers
- End-to-end ATM
- End result Quarter speed ahead!
- ISPs and CLECs will drive xDSL deployment (Covad,
Northpoint, AIX, UUNET, etc.) - Subloop must be unbundled - RBOCs will drag their
heels
12RBOCs WILL PREVENT MASS DSL DEPLOYMENT BY CLECs
ISPs
- RBOCs need to keep prices high to protect leased
line and T-1 revenues - Bury exorbitant markups in ATM circuit from CO to
ISP facility - Force distance insensitive pricing even for short
circuits - Forces cache to be in ISP facility rather than
next to DSLAM - ISP has to pass cost through to customer
- CLECs and ISPs are relying on dry copper loops
(used for alarm circuits, etc.) - RBOCs are making these loops harder to obtain -
raising prices, adding loading coils, etc. - Dry loop now costs 30 per month instead of the
9-15 it would cost for an alarm circuit. C.O.s
to put the equipment in are strapped for space. - 1996 Telecom Act lays foundation for unbundling,
but is insufficient - Requires incumbent LECs to provide
interconnection and mutually compensatory rates
for exchange service. - Unclear whether it is required for data services
- Arbitration has focused on unbundling of entire
loops, when it should focus on subloop elements - Network Interface Device
- Distribution plant (2-4 wire copper loops running
from customer to concentration equipment) - Concentration equipment (Aggregates dist plant
circuits) - Feeder plant (Fiber / high capacity copper
running from conc. Equipment to CO)
Source IDC
13BASIC ECONOMIC COMPARISONDSLs Subscriber-Based
Economics Win at Low Penetration Rates, but HFC
Triumphs When Plant Upgrade Cost is Spread over
Large User Base
- DSL modems _at_ 740, declining 30 annually cable
_at_ 250, decl. 20 - Cable upgrade is 55/HHP with 5 maintenance 1/2
charged to data - DSL carriers dont fix unreachable loops - 30
cost 400 to provision - Cost of capital 15 No differences in
backhaul, CS, mkting costs
14THE FUTURE OF CABLE AND DSL COMPETITION
- In areas where cable has already been rolled out
- Cable wins in residences (low marginal cost of
adding subscribers) - In areas where both services are deployed
- Battle of marketing, services, and performance.
The consumer wins - Cable has long term economic advantage for
residences - Areas where neither service will be rolled out or
win - Rural areas (wireless, satellite), FTTC
(unlimited bandwidth) - DSLs chances improve if
- RBOCs do not try and serve all customers, and are
willing to say no to those served by poor loops - Subloop elements are un-bundled for ISPs and
CLECs - Unrealistic requirements about network uptime and
ATM are dropped - Long term, the race will actually be for access
capacity - Cable has 4.5 Gbps pipe, whereas xDSL is pushing
limits of copper at 6Mbps - MSOs will push fiber out gradually as customers
need capacity - RBOCs will replace aging copper with fiber
wholesale, oversupplying some areas and
undersupplying others - RBOCs have more fiber in the ground, but MSOs are
laying new fiber faster