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IP OVER SATELLITE. Research Seminar on Telecommunications Business II Jarkko Viinamäki Helsinki University of Technology April 6 th 2004. Agenda. Introduction Satellite IP Technology Current Market Status Future Prospects Case Study: TiscaliSat Conclusion. Introduction.
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IP OVER SATELLITE Research Seminar on Telecommunications Business II Jarkko Viinamäki Helsinki University of Technology April 6th 2004
Agenda • Introduction • Satellite IP Technology • Current Market Status • Future Prospects • Case Study: TiscaliSat • Conclusion
Introduction • The number of Internet users is growing rapidly (~720 million in March 2004) • Need for broadband connections • Many areas do not have high speed terrestrial networks • Satellites can be used to route Internet traffic without expensive infrastructure
Satellite IP Technology • Satellite access equipment • Positioning • Operating frequencies • Service models • Standards • Pros & cons • Comparision to other technologies
Satellite Access Equipment • Spacecraft (Satellite) • multiple transponders (20-80 x 40-155Mbps) • separate frequencies for uplink/downlink • most common: C, Ku, Ka-bands • Service Provider Ground Station • ODU (large dish), IDU, NMS, NCC • connected to backbone Internet • Subscriber Side Ground Terminal • ODU (dish), IDO (satellite modem/DVB-card)
Positioning • GEO (Geosynchronous Earth Orbit, altitude 35786km, >250ms 1-way delay, 33% footprint) • MEO (Medium Earth Orbit, altitude 8000-20000km, 50-150ms 1-way delay, ILS) • LEO (Low Earth Orbit, altitude 350-2000km, 10-30ms 1-way delay, ILS) • Higher altitude means higher • round-trip-delay • launching cost • satellite lifetime and size • footprint/coverage • bit-error-rate (BER) and signal attenuation • need for transmission power
Operating Frequencies • S, L, X, C, Ku, Ka and V-band • Allocation controlled by IRFB (International Radio Frequencies Board) • C and Ku-band becoming congested • Ka-band suffers from high BER in rain • New satellites utilize the Ka-band • V-band is reserved for future use
Service Models • Hybrid unidirectional (high bandwidth downlink via satellite, uplink via ISDN/Modem/GPRS) • Bidirectional (pure asymmetric down/uplink via satellite) • Push/Broadcast mode (only downlink via satellite)
Standards • DVB-RCS (Digital Video Broadcast, Receive Channel via Satellite) • FEC • MF-TDMA • ATM Adaptation Layer 5 (AAL-5)or MPEG-2 transport • DOCSIS (Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification) • Proprietary protocols (DSSby Hughes Network Systems)
Pros • Practically global coverage • No need for expensive infrastructure • Single-hop transmission • Efficient broadcasting • Bandwidth-on-Demand (BOD) • Demand Assignment Multiple Access (DAMA) • Excellent reliability (up to 99,97%) • Same satellite dish can be used for IP and as television/radio channel receiver
Cons • high latency especially with GEO satellites • weather-related outages • solar-related outages • required Line-of-Sight (LOS) to the satellite • Ku-band is heavily degraded by atmosphere attenuation • high usage and equipment costs • high Bit-Error-Rate (BER) • usually lower bandwidth for end-users than with xDSL/Cable • TCP performs poorly in satellite links
Comparison to Other Technologies Satellite vs. terrestrial networks • very high latency (500ms vs. 10-50ms) • usage much more expensive (up to 100%) • higher equipment and installation costs • data transfer based billing vs. flat rate • possibility for almost unlimited BOD vs. fixed bandwidth/limited BOD • available anywhere vs. available only in dense residental areas
Satellite IP Markets Drivers • Demand for high-speed Internet in areas with poor or non-existent terrestrial infrastructure • Decreasing component costs • Standardization for increased vendor interoperability Challenges • still expensive satellite equipment and usage costs • latency issues • line-of-sight issues • better utilization of bandwidth • over supply and competition • delays: planned broadband systems have not materialized • business failures: satellite mobile systems have not achieved expected demand
Satellite Market Segments • Fixed Satellite Services (FSS) • trunk telephony, IP networks / Internet backbone, corporate VSAT, BOD, contribution services • Direct-to-Home Broadcasting (DTH) • analogue/digital satellite DTH • dominant market segment with around 66% share by 2012 ($85 billion revenue) (ESYS estimation) • North America and Western Europe current hot areas - markets in Asia look very promising • Digital Audio Radio Services (DARS) • Broadband Access Services (BBA) • Mobile Satellite Services (MSS) • maritime, auronautical, personal mobile, messaging & paging • Navigation (NAV) • road, maritime, aviation, personal
Market Viewpoints • Satellite operator view • risky market, satellite fleets cost up to 7 billion dollars • wide range of services (tv, radio, IP) • satellite lifetime is short • terrestrial networks steal practically all broadband customers in dense residental areas • lots of competition, over supply, big players • ISP view • no need for expensive infrastructure • co-operation with satellite operators and equipment vendors • BOD offers an ideal service model • very dynamic setups • currently approximately 7-10% of ISPs in the world use satellites • Customer view • choose satellite IP if you have no choice • broadcasting, distance-learning, high bandwidth requirements • use as backup for terrestrial links
Customer Segments • Small to Medium-sized Enterprises (SME) • Small Office/Home Office (SOHO) • Business Multi-Tenant Units (MTU) • Multi-Dwelling Units (MDU) • Hotspots • Rural communities • Aviation • Maritime • Military • Media & entertainment • Carriers & ISPs • Corporate networks • Public sector/government • Business (Point-of-Sale credit card processing)
Current Market Status • currently satellite systems only have 1.5% of the broadband market and may ultimately gain 6-7% of the global market according to guru Dr. J. Pelton • lots of competition, over supply, hype • complex pricing models, not enough focus • clear customer segments where customers have no other choice than satellite IP • satellite IP market growth has been radically overestimated • projects fail, plans are changed
Pricing Models • Per month pricing (flat rate) • rare, expensive • Transfer based billing • Hybrid models • limited transfer amount • monthly fee + transfer limit + extra cost/Mb • lowered bandwidth when limits exceeded • priority traffic with extra cost • unlimited BOD
Future Estimations • Most satellite ventures delayed (global recession, investments down) • European broadcast market near saturation • Terrestrial network usage prices going down • DVB-RCS equipment prices must fall by 50-60% to gain momentum • Pioneer Consulting expects global broadband satellite market to grow from $1 billion (2001) to $27 billion (2008)! • Northern Sky Research expects enterprise installed satellite base to grow from 76000 (2002) to 420000 (2007) and customer base from 71000 (2002) to 701000 (2007) in Europe
Future Estimations (cont.) • figures may be radical overestimates according to some gurus • affecting factors: rollout of new Ka-band satellites, improvements on technology, pricing, improvement of business models • connection price and latency issues are the most critical
Case Study: TiscaliSat • TiscaliSat offers satellite Internet connections in Finland using EUTELSAT satellites • Covers entire Finland – for remote areas a slightly larger dish is required • Two service models: 1-way hybrid, 2-way pure satellite • Customer needs a small satellite dish (150EUR) and a DVB PC-card (150EUR) • 1-way hybrid model: • 400-2000kbps downlink with 800Mb limit for 40 EUR per month. Customer needs ISDN/Modem for uplink • 40 EUR/month, installation 50 EUR + uplink costs • 2-way model: • 400/150kbps (downlink/uplink) bandwidth with 1,3Gb limit (after limit 64-200kbps) • 79 EUR/month, installation 1170EUR
Conclusion • There is a clear need and market niche for satellite IP connectivity. The customers are there, the money is there. • Customers are mainly those who can’t use terrestrial broadband networks, need high BOD or high level broadcasting ability • Prices are high • Some critical technological problems • Market hype, over supply