Title: Broadband Wireless World Forum San Francisco
1Broadband Wireless World Forum San Francisco
February 2001
www.airspan.com
Unlocking the Broadband Residential Market
Advances in Low-Cost CPE and Installation Eric
Stonestrom CEO
2Outline
- Main themes
- Broadband wireless Residential market
characteristics and trends - Technology trends to address market needs
- Airspans response
- Conclusion
3Main themes
- Broadband wireless is happening now
- Combining voice AND data is the key to a
successful business model - The introduction of residential broadband
wireless will drive volumes up and costs down - Many systems deployed already especially in
3.5GHz, PCS and MMDS bands
4Residential market characteristics and trends
- Data speeds comparable to DSL
- 512k today 2Mbit/s by end 2001
- 4X year-on-year speed increases!
- Distance independence from exchange
- A uniform service must be delivered by the
operator significant numbers of residential
subscribers live out of reach of DSL - Combined delivery of high quality voice AND
high-speed data are key to success - Voice alone is not enough operators need to
offer high speed data in order to remain
competitive - Data alone can rarely generate sufficient
revenues to justify the business case for ANY
technology - High Churn rates
- Some markets churn at 2 percent per month
5Technology trends to address market needs
- Data speeds
- Wireless DSL systems available today to meet data
speed requirements - Many technical developments underway to achieve
future data needs - 64QAM MIMO OFDM multi-carrier CDMA etc
- Distance independence from exchange
- Frequency band is critical to achieving good
range LMDS is not appropriate for residential
market - Below 5GHz is best compromise
- Wireless DSL systems deliver!
- Combined delivery of high quality voice AND
high-speed data - VoIP to end customer is not the best solution for
residential - But integration with VoIP networks is a clear
industry trend - High churn rates
- Need to be able to recover large proportion of
installed equipment when subscriber churns away
Integrated external subscriber equipment - Very short installation/recovery time auto
configuration of subs equipment, subscriber
installs
6Technical and Technology Aspects
7Technology Evolution for low-cost BWA
Flexible, scaleable Base Station (CT) architecture
Modular CTs for Microcell applications and
small-scale deployments
Infrastructure
Wide range of voice and data terminals
- Expanded range of terminals
- Lower cost
- Multi-Megabit Speeds
CPE
ASIC technology
- Soft-configuration
- Higher integration
- Smaller footprint
- Higher Bandwidth
- Higher spectral efficiency
Underlying Technology
TIME
Speed
Cost
8CPE - Airspans approach
- Internal Service Dependent unit
- Upgradeable / replaceable if service mix changes
- Low power
- Unobtrusive
- External Frequency dependent antenna
- Small, lightweight, easy to deploy
- Single co-ax connection
This approach maximizes flexibility whilst
minimizing product cost
9Lower costs through standardization
- Agreement on standards can make a significant
impact on technology costs - viz the
(GSM/cdmaOne) mobile markets. - However in the broadband wireless access market,
the needs are different - Non-uniform regulation and allocation of spectrum
- Customers are not mobile
- Much proprietary development has been undertaken
already - Some fora are active
- IEEE 802.16 (WirelessMAN) - Widest industry
support today - WDSL Consortium
- ETSI BRAN/HyperAccess
- . Others
- Standards may evolve - but not before many
systems have been deployed!
10System range and performance
- This is key to the ultimate economics of a given
system - 5 x range will typically need 25 x fewer base
stations to cover given area - There are also 25 fewer backhaul links to be
installed - HOWEVER this depends on having sufficient system
capacity for large range systems - AND sufficient spectrum
- Where many small sites are deployed,
INTERFERENCE is often the limiting factor - In comparing the economics of various systems, it
is essential to examine the detailed tradeoffs
between - Capacity
- Deployed spectral efficiency
- Associated costs of (e.g. backhaul, site
acquisition, power)
11Quality and DFM (Design For Manufacture)
- Operational costs are in many cases highly
dependent on the maturity of the product, the
quality of the build and the experience of the
manufacturer concerned - Operating BWA equipment requires
- Extremely rugged tried-and-tested designs capable
of withstanding a wide range of climatic
conditions - A product that can be easily maintained or
upgraded, with minimal downtime while upgrades
are undertaken - Comprehensive OM facilities
- To manufacture such high performance equipment
requires excellent DFM techniques, and access to
high-volume production lines in order to achieve
lowest-cost product.
12System Architecture
- Frequency
- Many different frequency bands and allocations in
many different global markets - No world-wide frequency standards
- Inevitable consequence an architecture that
restricts frequency flexibility will not achieve
ultimate low-cost - insufficient manufacturing
volumes - Services
- Wide variations in service requirements and mix
- Mixtures of 10bT, n x POTS, leased lines, ISDN
- Combinations of service delivery to customers
such as voice and data - Dictates need for flexible subscriber service
delivery unit - HOWEVER - more modularity generally leads to
higher costs therefore careful design that
achieves both flexibility and low-cost needs to
be thought through from the outset.
13Spectrum Aspects
1 GHz
2 GHz
4 GHz
10 GHz
40 GHz
- Microwave pt-pt
- LMDS (28)
- MVDS (40)
- Satellites
- Fixed links
- Cordless
- Mobile
CARRIER CAPACITY
LOW
HIGH
SPECTRUM CONGESTION
HIGH ----------
LOW
- CELL SIZE
- LOS
- Atmospheric Attenuation
LARGE
SMALL
- Optimum balance between
- Performance
- Ease of Deployment
- Economics
INTRINSIC COST
LOW
HIGH
PCS
MMDS
3.8 GHz
900 MHz
14HomeRF and HomePNA
Integrated Subscriber Terminal
Phone1
RJ11
Home Wiring
Phone2
ST-P1V2
Connect Box
Power Supply
- Home PNA and HomeRF allow simple and fast
installation of CPE - Customers may extend home networks more easily
- More equipment can be recovered when subscribers
churn
15OM - key requirements
- Fault detection and repair
- Presentation of events
- Redundancy - automatic/manual switching
- Routine/background testing
- Over the air customer activation
- Minimal turn-up cost
- Links into other management systems
- Service management
- Performance analysis
- Quality of service
- Minimize cost and frequency of customer call out
- Evolve with the operator
16AS8100 Network Management System
SUPPORTS ALL AS4000 Releases
Comprehensive graphical-based network management
system
17Typical residential installation
- Simple, fast install typically 10 STs per 2-man
team per day - Low installation costs
18Radio survey
- Note trees all around! Systems need to work
reliably in this environment! - Results used to predict which subscribers can be
reached targeted deployment at lowest
operational cost
19Infrastructure
- Modularity to achieve scalability and
customisation - Re-use of hardware as multi-function boards
soft-configured for different functions - Reduces costs
- Simplifies spares
- Simplifies maintenance
- Minimal requirement for site visits
- Full configuration and upgrade via OM
20Airspans Response AS4000 Wireless DSL
AS8100 Sitespan
AS4000 CT and AC
AS9000 Airplan
AS4000 Subscriber Terminals
AS4000
21Conclusion
- Broadband Wireless is here today and being
deployed worldwide! - Low-cost solutions are available for residential
markets especially SoHo applications - Application of new technology is driving costs
down - Quicker install, HomeRF/PNA, and self-install
- Product costs
- Delivery of bundled services (voice and data)
produces a compelling business case for ILECs,
CLECs and ISPs
22Thank you for listening..
www.airspan.com
Leaders in the Wireless DSL market
23Company Overview
www.airspan.com
24Company Profile
- A global supplier of Wireless DSL systems and
solutions - Dedicated solely to wireless fixed access
telecommunications - Established technology with a proven track record
- Committed to the evolving business
technological needs of our customers
25Experience - 1992 to Today
- Formed in 1992 to focus on RD of wireless
communications within DSC Communications - A pioneering product range launched in 1996
- One of the first to deploy point-to-multipoint
radio systems - Became an independent US corporation in February,
1998. Investors included Sevin Rosen, Oak, and
Deutsche Bank - IPO in July 2000
26Resources
- Headquartered in Florida, with primary operations
in London - More than 100 engineers involved directly with
RD - Self-contained facilities from lab testing to
system assembly delivery - A "greenfield" live air site for testing
monitoring long term system performance - Comprehensive service portfolio from initial
consulting to full system support - On-site in-house customer training programs
27Our Experience
- Installed capacity exceeds 170,000 lines
worldwide - More than 50 customers in over 40 countries
- Urban to rural deployments
- Approvals in more than 25 countries
28Global Customer Base
Datel
29Some of Airspans partners
Technology Manufacturing
OEMs
30Market Overview
- Internet growth is driving global demand for
reliable access increased bandwidth - World-wide telecom deregulation is creating new
opportunities to provide local access - Service providers are
- Differentiating their services by offering a
greater range of services - Expanding their focus beyond large business
customers - Needing more cost-effective solutions
- Airspan has products that meet todays
requirements and that evolve with the
ever-changing market
31Airspans Response AS4000 Wireless DSL
AS8100 Sitespan
AS4000 CT and AC
AS9000 Airplan
AS4000 Subscriber Terminals
AS4000
32AS4000 Wireless DSL Platform Architecture
The CO Site
Subscriber Sites
The Radio Site
Small Business
Ethernet (10baseT)
AC
PSTN interconnect
Voice
CT
Backhaul
Switch
Residential or SOHO
TCP/IP
Router
Router
SS
Ethernet
Voice
V.90 modem
SC
Residential
Voice
V.90 modem
The Management Site
- AS4000 - an Integrated Services Platform
- DSL rate data and toll quality voice
- Internet traffic groomed for ISP presentation
33PacketDrive - High Speed Wireless DSL
- 1.6 Mbit/s Packet Delivery per RF channel today
20Mbit/s per channel by end 2001 - Up to 24 RF channels per Base Station - 480
Mbit/s total Packet throughput
High speed Packet pipe
Multi-subscriber Internet Access
RF Channel
34Airspan Total Solution Provider
- Having a working product is not enough
- Customers increasingly require complete solutions
- Network Management
- Network/radio planning
- Surveys, Installation turn-up ongoing
technical support - Airspan provides additional product and support
services - Airspan AS8100 - Sitespan element manager
- Customer Support Services
- Training Services
- Radio Planning Services
- AS9000 - AirPlan radio planning software
- Industry experts
35Airspan - the leader in the W-DSL market
Airspan has unrivalled experience - derived from
many years of deployment and development of
Wireless Access systems
- Airspan has solutions for
- Internet access
- Data
- Voice
- TODAY!
Airspan has the technology roadmap to support
even higher speeds and capacities in the future
36www.airspan.com