Tag Archive for 2010

Terabit Ethernet Developing

Terabit Ethernet DevelopingResearchers at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) are working on the next evolution of Ethernet – Terabit Ethernet. UCSB Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Dan Blumenthal told LightReading that the goal of the recently created Terabit Optical Ethernet Center (TOEC), is to create Terabit Ethernet (TbE) which runs at 1 trillion bits per second by 2015 and to follow it up with 100Tbit/s Ethernet by 2020.

Professor Blumenthal explained to LightReading that he wants the TOEC and its partners to produce something the industry can use, not a one-time lab experiment that only works with duct tape and glue. “We’re not talking about lab hero experiments,” Blumenthal told LightReading. The real-world focus of TOEC has helped attract partners like  Agilent Technologies Inc. (NYSE: A), Google (NASDAQ: GOOG), Intel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC), Rockwell Collins Inc., and Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ) to help with the research. I wrote about Intel’s TBPS efforts back in July.

Terabit Ethernet is hard

TOEC could probably use the help because developing TbE is looking like no simple task according to LightReading. Bob Metcalfe, Ethernet’s creator, and now a Polaris Venture Partners partner, speculated two years ago that a terabit standard might need a rethinking of everything, even the fiber itself.

Based on current UCSB research, professor Blumenthal speculates that TbE  may include:

  • Photonic integrated circuits (PICs) are a must.
  • Coherent receivers, but at a scale well beyond what’s being used for 100Gbit/s Ethernet. A likely candidate is 1,024-QAM: quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) transmitting 10 bits per symbol, a scheme likely to require 100GHz electronics.
  • To make that coherent receiver energy-efficient, TOEC is “trying to move a lot of what’s in the digital signal processor into the optics,” Blumenthal says.
  • New materials for fiber-optics aren’t out of the question. “We won’t start out with that, but it’ll move in that direction,” Blumenthal says.
  • Other items on the TOEC shopping list include optical phase-locked loops, new semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs), and methods for drastically lowering on-chip optical losses.

The questions go beyond the optical layer. To make operations more synchronous padding and frame delineation were added to 10Gbit/s and 100Gbit/s Ethernet, Blumenthal pointed out. “Do we keep doing that? Or do we go purely asynchronous? We don’t know yet. …Once you put the word ‘Ethernet’ in there, it’s not about just transmission. It’s about being backward-compatible. That’s the beauty of Ethernet. We can’t lose that essence.

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The need for TbE is real (I first wrote about Intel’s TbE efforts here) and being driven by video. More video is already riding over existing networks. “We’re going to need much faster networking to handle the explosion in Internet traffic and support new large-scale applications like cloud computing,” Professor Blumenthal told Physorg. Stuart Elby, Vice President of Network Architecture for Verizon told Physorg, “Based on current traffic growth, it’s clear that 1 Terabit per second trunks will be needed in the near future.”

Facebook is already looking at TbE in their data centers. PCWorld reports that at the Ethernet Alliance‘s Technology Exploration Forum, Donn Lee, a Facebook Engineer said, “… there is already a need for 1 terabit.” Facebook has so many servers, and those servers can process data so fast, that they could fill 64 Terabit Ethernet pipes in the backbone of one data center, Lee said.

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Ann Arbor Icon Closed

The Ann Arbor landmark Village Corner market, better known as the VC to UM students has closed.

The Village Corner store at 601 S. Forest Ave. in Ann Arbor.

The store at the corner of South University and South Forest is scheduled to be demolished, along with the Student Campus bike shop and long-closed Bagel Factory (mmmm Fragel) to make room for “high-rise” student housing.

During my time on the University of Michigan campus, I made many trips to the VC for coffee, TP, and other necessities of student life.

U of M grad and VC owner Dick Scheer who has run the campus icon for 40 years with his wife, Sally, told the Detroit News that he plans to find a new spot for his store. Let’s hope so since much of the character of Ann Arbor is fading in my opinion.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Google Searches for Power on Seabed

Google Searches for Power on Seabed Google (GOOG) is investing in an undersea power cable project linking offshore wind farms with energy grids along the Mid-Atlantic region.  Known as the Atlantic Wind Connection backbone, the cable will stretch 350 miles off the Atlantic coast from New Jersey to Virginia. The cable will collect power from multiple offshore wind farms and deliver it via the cables to the on-shore grid. The AWC backbone will be able to tap into 6000 megawatts of offshore generation, enough to serve about 1.9 million homes according to reports.

Atlantic Wind Connection backboneGoogle, will take a 37.5% stake in the project. “We’re willing to take calculated risks on early-stage ideas and projects that can have dramatic impacts while offering attractive returns,” Rick Needham, green business operations director, wrote on the Google official blog.  Other investors in the project include U.S.-based Good Energies which invests in energy projects with a 37.5% equity stake, Japan’s Marubeni Corporation will have a 15% stake. Atlantic Grid Development LLC, a company formed to develop the project whose shareholders include independent transmission company Trans-Elect, will have 10%.

Project cots Google billions

Businessweek says the first phase of the project, which the developers aim to complete by early 2016, would run about 150 miles and cost between $1.7 billion and $1.8 billion. The second phase to complete the 350-mile line could be finished by 2020, Bob Mitchell, chief executive officer of Trans-Elect, told reporters telephone interview. The New York Times reports the project will cost $5 billion total in total. Reports are that Google and Good Energies’ initial investment is about $200 million each for the first phase of the project.

Google logoThe partners believe that the mid-Atlantic region’s shallow waters will make it easier to install turbines 10-15 miles offshore, almost out of sight from land. Without it, offshore wind developers would be forced to build individual radial transmission lines from each offshore wind project to the shore, Needham claimed.  “This system will act as a superhighway for clean energy,” Mr. Needham wrote, adding that the proposed project could remove “a major barrier to scaling up offshore wind“. If successful, the AWC project will help to relieve grid congestion and boost transmission capacity in a key market. Google believes that the move into alternative energy is consistent with the company’s goal of promoting renewable energy.

Spray towers over the 57-foot-tall Ludington Lighthouse in Michigan as a storm packing winds of up to 81 mph howled across the Midwest and South on Tuesday, Oct. 26. Jeff Kiessel, Ludington Daily News

This isn’t the first time Google has dipped its toe in the spreading pool of wind power. The search giant agreed to buy 114 megawatts of clean energy from an Iowa wind farm to power its data centers. Google also invested nearly 40 million in two wind farms.

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Not that I really want to bet against Google, but the IEEE reports that Michigan has an offshore potential of 100 GW, nearly double that of  Virginia, Delaware, Maryland, and New Jersey. Perhaps Google co-founder and East Lansing native Larry Page remembers winters in Michigan and thinks that the moving ice sheets on the lakes could damage a tower.

Michigan Offshore Wind Speeds

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

ATT the Leader in Lobbying

ATT the Leader in LobbyingWith the political silly season upon us. The good folks over at ars-technica points us to The Open Secrets database. According to them, AT&T (T) easily qualifies as the top all-time donor to political campaigns. From 1990 through 2010, the carrier in its various ownership forms spent over $45,461,879 lobbying politicians, outspending the next two corporate lobbying contenders, the National Association of Realtors ($36,749,493) and Goldman Sachs ($32,660,452).

Open Secrets logoThe money AT&T spends on lobbying politicians comes from every monthly customer bill paid for dial-tone, iPhone, U-Verse, DSL, etc. service.  Ars-technica says that tracking where AT&T spends its money is easy. Figuring out the corporation’s politics is harder. OpenSecrets.org’s list of contributions shows that Republicans and Democrats share equally in AT&T’s gift-giving.  Here are the leading recipients.

  • Reid, Harry (D-NV) $30,000
  • Crist, Charlie (I-FL) $22,100
  • Blunt, Roy (R-MO) $11,500
  • Guthrie, Steven Brett (R-KY) $11,500
  • Jenkins, Lynn (R-KS) $11,500

In Michigan, the same mixed pattern continues. AT&T contributed equal amounts of cash to Democratic and Republican House members:

  • John Dingell (D-MI) $10,000
  • Mark Schauer (D-MI) $10,000
  • Fred Upton (R-MI) $10,000

ATT logoIn 2008, for example, the carrier spent $14,736,518 on lobbying federal and state office-seekers. But the company spread the loot around in a fairly bipartisan manner. although during the 2008 presidential election, Barack Obama was clearly the telco’s favorite. Obama (D-IL) received $264,411 from AT&T which surpassed his Republican challenger John McCain (R-AZ) who received $201,438 in AT&T money according to the article from Ars Ars also noted that the carrier spent roughly the same amount on solid liberal Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) as it did on no-holds-barred libertarian Ron Paul (R-TX).

Lobbying ensure AT&T always has friends

Democratic Party logoArs technica speculates that Republican Party logoAT&T’s political donation strategy is to spread the money evenly so that no matter what happens, AT&T has friends on Capitol Hill and in the White House. The beneficiaries of the AT&T gift-giving however, tend to be fairly established candidates, mostly incumbents.

Undoubtedly AT&T expects help from the politicians it contributes to. In the second quarter of this year, the company spent over $3,086,786.27 for lobbying activities on Capitol Hill (PDF). Much of their time and energy went to a variety of telecom-related bills pending in the House or Senate. These included:

  • HR 1319—The Informed P2P User Act. The bill would require P2P software providers to offer “clear and conspicuous” notice about the kinds of files the program can share. And no sneaky extra installs please, and the software can’t block consumers from deleting it. The proposed law has passed the House (PDF) and is awaiting committee action in the Senate.
  • HR 3458—Internet Freedom Preservation Act of 2009. Edward Markey’s (D-MA) legislation would write the FCC’s Open Internet policy statement into the Communications Act, barring ISPs from being allowed to “block, interfere with, discriminate against, impair, or degrade” access to any lawful content from any lawful application or device. It is currently sitting in the House Committee on Energy and Commerce (PDF), where it will doubtless stay until the Federal Communications Commission gives some sign about what it wants to do with its latest net neutrality proposals.
  • HR 1019—The State Video Tax Fairness Act of 2009 would prohibit states from taxing pay-TV services, including IP video services like AT&T’s U-Verse. AT&T is probably in favor of this one.
  • S 773—The Cybersecurity Act of 2009. The scariest part of this bill would have given the president the power to shut down the Internet in the event of a major cyber attack. That provision has been removed. Now the proposed law focuses on reorganizing the balkanized mess which is the federal government’s cybersecurity defense infrastructure.

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Lobbying by ATT wins the carrier a degree of influence that goes way beyond its social benefitOver the last two decades, AT&T has spent hundreds of millions of dollars on political races, lobbying, and philanthropic giving. And because the telco is careful to spread those resources over a broad political and social landscape, they win the carrier a degree of influence that goes way beyond the numerical figures cited by ars-technica.

Think about that as you vote on Tuesday.

Here is a link from the League of Women Voters to find your local polling place.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Fiber Through Sewers Coming to US

Fiber Through Sewers Coming to USi3 America has announced the first U.S. pilot of its Fibrecity open access network in Quincy, IL Light Reading reports. The firm believes the time is right in the U.S. market, based on the Google (GOOG) inspired boom in municipal fiber projects said Brian Foley, VP of sales for i3 America. “We are excited to be working with Quincy on this pilot — the city has been extremely cooperative in moving things forward,” Foley told LightReading.

i3 America logoi3 partners with municipalities and municipally owned utilities to deploy the i3 Fibrecity system in sewer systems. “By working in partnership with the municipality, we will take their information about the existing pipes and put that into our GIS systems,” Alasdair Rettie, technical director of i3 Group Ltd. said in the LightReading article. “We will ask where they have problems, because we don’t want to put fiber in areas where there is already an issue. Before we deploy, we will clean the sewers and do a survey of the sewer lines to pick the routes we want to go, and where it’s needed, we will repair the sewers.

By using the waste-water pipes to deploy fiber, i3 claims to trim 30 percent to 50 percent off the cost of deploying fiber. Light Reading says the i3 patented technology secures the fiber optic cable to the bottom of a sewer and is actually designed to enable sediment that might normally settle there to move farther downstream.

i3 will build and operate the local loop fiber network for its partners in Illinois on an open access basis, Rettie stated in the article. The parties then either work out a revenue-sharing deal or enable the municipality to use the network for its own purposes, including providing fiber connections to schools, video security monitoring, traffic management, public safety, and/or subsidized connections into homes of low-income residents.

Fibrecity logoAccording to Light Reading, the Fibrecity network is an open-access system, based on FTTH optoelectronics from Ericsson AB (ERIC) and Enablence Technologies Inc. (ENA) which uses i3’s system of running fiber through sewers to a place  near the home, where the fiber is then micro-trenched to an Optical Network Terminal (ONT) that has four Gigabit Ethernet ports. Fibrecity is designed to use a 1-12 split for its passive optical network, versus the 1-32 split commonly used in US fiber deployments, so each household is guaranteed 100 Mbit/s symmetrically, Rettie says, with the ability to burst, possibly with a boost-button paid service.

By taking an open-access approach, i3 can allow multiple service providers offering different services to address each household. “We encourage much more than triple play,” Rettie told Light Reading. “We have service providers today using IP connections to provide home security services; an applications service provider could use this to provide cloud computing; your employer could rent one of the ports to enable work-at-home. It’s all about thinking outside the box.” Open APIs are built into the i3 approach — it has tied into the APIs of Ericsson and Enablence and can offer service providers various service templates, featuring different upstream and downstream speeds, that they can then choose to offer.

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Fibrecity seems like a no-brainer. Besides the flexibility and cost savings a private network presents, other benefits include:

  1. On-going maintenance – Over the last 8 months on our current network, we have had two 24 hour+ outages due to fires, one outage due to gunshots and one from an auger. None of these incidents would have happened if the clients fiber backbone was in the sewer instead of on poles.
  2. Allows owners to bypass the outrageous pole make-ready demands that utilities make to prevent private fiber networks from being built.  I have seen a private utility delay a public project in public right-of-way for over 2 years.
  3. Finally, i3 says it repairs sewers as needed, which is a money savings that any tax-payer will appreciate.

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him at LinkedInFacebook and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.