
We Will Soon Live in a 100 Gbps World
Thanks to iPhones, tablets and Netflix, the demand for bandwidth is back and in other words drumming up interest in expanding and building out fiber networks. Today we think 1 Gbps fiber networks are enough, now soon we will need 100 Gbps, and a host of infrastructure companies are gearing up to provide it. Unnoticed by Silicon Valley, telecom is on the move again.
Equipment and network companies just as Ciena and Adtran are reaping the rewards in their stock prices: Ciena’s stock has risen more than $14.74, or 117 percent in the last six months, during Adtran’s has risen by $14.46 — or 47 percent. Other industry players just as Infinera and Tellabs, for all that, have seen their stock prices fall. However Infinera is about to announce new products aimed at ushering in “The Terabit Age,” which may offer a boost. Corning which provides the actual glass that goes into the ground for fiber networks has seen its share prices rise by $6.70, or nearly 42 percent, in the last six months.
Meanwhile cloud computing and connecting data centers to faster and fatter networks has led to a new round of investment in fiber providers. From Allied Fiber, which launched last year building a new type of network that combines the pipe with the processing capacity at data centers along the fiber pathways, to GE Capital providing $230 million in available credit to LightTower Fiber Networks, a dark fiber provider, which in the last 6 months, has purchased three different fiber companies.
“[T]here is a need to increase deployments of higher speed optical wavelengths just as 40 and 100 gigabit. We, to sum up, raised our forecast and nevertheless project that in the total WDM market, which includes both metro and long haul, 40 gigabit wavelength shipments will grow at a CAGR of over 40 percent and the recently available 100 gigabit wavelengths will grow at a CAGR over 200 percent. By 2015, the combined 40 and 100 gigabit wavelengths may contribute up to $4.7 billion of optical revenue.”
Fiber Inside the CloudAs fiber between data centers makes wired networks faster, the onus is on the networking providers inside data centers to boost their speeds. This means innovations just as Fujitsu’s creating of an all optical switch that will keep packets coming into the network at light speed in their optical format as long as possible earlier converting them to electronic signals. This keeps the packets whizzing around the network faster and saves on energy because the signals aren’t converted.
Obviously as interconnect technologies just as Intel’s Light Peak and all-optical chips advance, the future computing and web world will be based on light as opposed to circuits, however that’s furthermore out than I’m willing to go here. For nevertheless, the rise of fiber is occurring in the ground and will before long reach the switches inside data centers.
Role in wired broadband for municipalities
Fiber will as well play a role in wired broadband for municipalities. Last week the FCC issued a National Broadband Map that showed how lacking many hospitals, schools and libraries are in the U.S., with two-thirds of schools not having access to 25 Mbps or higher connections. Joe Freddoso, President and CEO of the North Carolina MCNC, a non-profit fiber network serving universities, told me that demand at universities increases by up to 20 percent a a year. Right nevertheless his network “is barely scratching the surface” of its 40 Gbps capacity, nevertheless he estimates that by the end of this decade the network will need 200 Gbps capacity.
The Mobile Ecosystem: Fiber on the RunWired communities aren’t the only consumer demand driving faster fiber. Mobile operators are seeking faster backhaul to support their 4G networks. Two weeks ago, I talked to Stefaan Vanhastel, director of product marketing from Alcatel Lucent who said the company’s 10 Gbps research is aimed more at mobile operators than residential consumers. That makes sense given that LTE (Long Term Evolution, latest standard in the mobile network technology) networks of today are seeking to provide speeds of up to 12 Gbps, during those of tomorrow may provide ten times that amount. Once a bunch of individuals at a cell site are sharing those speeds the pipe taking their traffic back to the larger web has to grow as then. From a DB technology note issued this morning:
Carriers are looking to pull fiber to all of their base stations, and 1GB systems may not be sufficient. This is good news for Ciena who remains in the lead for supplying 100GB and OTN systems. More 1GB and above base stations means more traffic and this should be lead to solid demand for Cisco's and Juniper's carrier business.
Indeed, Cisco’s ASR-9000 router introduced in 2009 to deliver terabytes of capacity at the edge, has seen a lot of success in spite of naysayers questioning the need for that much bandwidth. This latest fiber build out is showing how we’re taking advantage of connectivity to improve our products and our lives. As a platform for research we nevertheless have a long way to go with broadband and we’re going to need a lot more bandwidth to do it.
- · Rackspace debuts OpenStack cloud servers
- · America's broadband adoption challenges
- · EPAM Systems Leverages the Cloud to Enhance Its Global Delivery Model With Nimbula Director
- · Telcom & Data intros emergency VOIP phones
- · Lorton Data Announces Partnership with Krengeltech Through A-Qua⢠Integration into DocuMailer
