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Explore the current landscape of optical networking, market drivers, trends, applications, and key industry players. Learn about network segmentation, market size, and the evolution of optical technology. Gain insights into market drivers, carrier segmentation, cost containment, service differentiation, and dark fiber availability.
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The Optical Communications Market Presented by:Andrew McCormickSenior Analyst, Optical CommunicationsNovember 21, 2000
Optical Networking: Big Picture Global Crossing, Level 3, Qwest Service Providers Systems Nortel, Alcatel, Ciena Network Segment Functional Components JDSU, Corning, Lucent Materials
Presentation Agenda • Today’s Optical Network • Market Drivers • Market Trends • Applications • Market Size • Industry Players • Summary
Functional Segmentation • Transport • Gets information from Point A to Point B • Creates pathways in the network • Switching • Makes decisions about flows of information based on destination • Occurs at junction points of transport pathways
Network Segmentation • Backbone • Long-Haul Transport • Core Switching & Routing • Metro Core • Transport between network hubs such as Central Offices or Private colocation • Metro Level Switching & Routing • Local Access • “Last Mile” to customer premises.
Optical Timeline • Currently on 3rd generation of networking equipment • First generation is SONET • Designed for reliability in the voice network • <50 ms restoration time • 2nd generation is DWDM • Multi-channel fiber relief solution • Primarily backbone application • 3rd generation is “intelligent optical networking” • Software platforms that takes advantage of optics
Data Exceeds Voice Traffic • Data traffic doubling approximately every 100 days • Frame relay and T1 access growing 40% per year • 2 million DSL lines and over 3 million cable modems will be in use • 700% CAGR from 1998 to 2000 • Most voice calls are local while most data connections are long distance
Carrier Market Segmentation • Niche players require increasing levels of connectivity • Dark fiber providers own the physical assets • Bandwidth wholesalers build/buy dark fiber and light it to offer wave services • Tier 1 ISPs or IXCs buy wavelengths to expand networks • Tier 2/3 ISPs and CLECs buy channels on waves to connect customers to the backbone
Carrier Segmentation Tier 2/3 ISP/CLEC Tier 1 ISP/IXC BW Wholesaler Dark Fiber Provider Colo Fiber Wave Channel Circuit/ Service
Cost Containment • Rate of CapEx growth exceeds rate of revenue growth • Most spending continues to be on legacy TDM equipment • Falling bandwidth prices and lower margin data services cut deeper into profit margins • DS3 from NY to LA went from $29k in Dec. 1999 to $15k in Sept. 2000 • STM-1 from London to Paris dropped from $10k to $8k from March to September
Service Differentiation & Velocity • Competition and cost pressures means revenue must come from services • First mover advantage means 50% market share • Need to reduce service deployment times from months to minutes
Dark Fiber Availability • Multiple companies are building fiber networks • Carriers • Qwest • Level 3 • Pure-play fiber • MFN • NEON • Utilities • Willams • Enron • Montana P&L/Touch America • BecoCom
Market Trends • Transition from Sonet ring architectures to optical mesh networks • Coupling of service and transport layers • ODSI and OIF initiatives allow routers to talk to optical switches • Moving to “IP over photons” • Distributed intelligence • O-E-O vs. “all-optical”
Applications • Wavelength services • Point-to-point connections providing unprotected transport • Allows carriers to quickly expand network to a new service territory • Portable bandwidth • Carrier pays for capacity or service (OC-48, GbE) that they can move from place to place • Bandwidth trading
Summary • Data services require new network architecture • Expense of growing the current network outstrips the additional revenue • Carriers looking primarily at TCO and scalability • Optical networks will allow creation of new services and allow carriers a competitive advantage • Growth in optical markets will accelerate beyond 2003