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2. 2 Strategic Product Focus
3. 3 RFoG Vs. IPTV Why Not IPTV?
Standards are not fully developed
Headend equipment is expensive and subject to change as the standards evolve
New MPEG 4 set top boxes needed in the Customer’s premise
“Back office” support does not yet exist at the cableco
Workforce has little if any experience in the IP domain Why RFoG?
Uses the headend technology already in place
Uses the set top boxes already in place
Uses the DOCSIS platforms already in place and supports DOCSIS 3
Simply replaces what would be the traditional RF node
No “back office” changes are needed. “Business as usual”
Little workforce training is needed
4. 4 Return can be transmitted at 1310 or 1610* nm
1310 nm is a lower cost solution today
1610 nm is the GPON friendly solution
Compatible with PON standards
PON standards support 1490 nm downstream, 1310 nm upstream RFoG Spectrum
5. 5 RFoG Reference Design
6. 6 Evolutionary FTTx
7. 7 RFoG Node Configuration 24 dBm output EDFA (21 dBm x2)
Integrated downstream split / upstream 1310 (or 1610) filter
Dual Quad channel analog return Rx
Digital upstream to the headend
Can be up to 80 KM HE to Home
Can mux up to 15 CWDM RFoG nodes on a single fiber or 40 DWDM
8. 8 Micro-node Specs
9. 9 Simple RFoG Design
10. 10 Hybrid BC/NC RFoG Design
11. 11 RFoG Fiber Management
12. 12 RFoG Capital Expense
13. 13 RFoG Capital Expense
14. 14 RFoG Limitations Downstream reach traditionally limited by EDFA output, splitter loss, CPE input requirements
Upstream reach limited by CPE laser, splitter loss, receiver input requirements, and channel loading
Upstream laser typically a low-cost, low-power unit
Fiber count
‘Just cable TV’ services
What happens next when MSOs need to provide even higher bandwidth services?
15. 15 What is RFPON? RFPON: Next-generation RFoG
RFoG with the ability to seamlessly add GEPON capabilities
Simple, cost-effective way for MSOs to deploy FTTP
Same services as traditional HFC
Same technology as traditional HFC
Same back-office provisioning systems as DOCSIS system
Ideal for:
New housing developments where FTTP is a must
Low density, rural areas of the franchise
Can serve homes, businesses and MDUs
SCTE standards initiative in process
16. 16 RFPON
17. 17 Evolutionary FTTPDOCSIS® & GEPON RFPON VHub™ providing video, DOCSIS data and voice services
PLUS capacity for 2 PON modules
GEPON compliant
1490 nm downstream, 1310 nm upstream
Up to 256 Video+DOCSIS customers
PLUS up to 128 (2x64) GEPON customers
Each GEPON module supports
1 Gbps bandwidth
Up to 64 customers
DOCSIS back-office provisioning
One system for both solutions
No operator re-training
18. 18 Simple RFPON Design
19. 19 GEPON Module Compatible with HFC or Fiber Deep architectures
Serves up to 64 customers using standard PON CPE devices
Bandwidth rate limiting from 1 Mbps to 1000 Mbps in 1Mbps steps
Compatible with standard GigE switch at head-end
Compatible with Aurora digital return and NI3030E
20. 20 Cost Comparison (Today)
21. 21 Cost Comparison (Future?)
22. 22 CPE Cost Comparison
23. 23 In Summary RFoG’s cost is more than HFC in high take rate / high density locations
Can be lower CapEx in low take rate / low density applications
Does not require specialized technicians
Does not require “back office” changes
RFPON is the next-generation RFoG
Extends reach / Reduces cost / Reduces fiber count
Doubles upstream bandwidth (compared to DOCSIS 3.0)
Seamless evolution to include PON functionality
Standards-based GEPON
Up to 64 users per GEPON module
Integrated with deployed DOCSIS provisioning system
24. 24 Existing, Deployed, Working