Tag Archive for Boston University

Twisted Light Speeds Up Internet

Twisted Light Speeds Up InternetAll the data the reaches every Internet-connected home, business, and mobile device get there via thousands of miles of laser-filled glass, copper, or plastic wires. Firms large and small are constantly developing new ways to pack as much data as possible into these cables (rb- I’ve covered many of these developments here, here, and here). Here is a new theory that uses twisted light.

Multi Mode FiberSigne Brewster at GigaOM wrote about a major leap in how much data Comcast (CMCSA)AT&T (T), and Verizon (VZ) can send down the Internet tubes. Researchers at Boston University and the University of Southern California were able to send 1.6 terabits per second of data (rb- equal to transmitting eight Blu-Ray DVDs every second) 1 kilometer in the lab. They have developed data beams that travel in a spiral instead of a straight line without getting jumbled together.

Orbital angular momentum beams

They keep the beams in order by generating optical vortices (a.k.a orbital angular momentum, or OAM beams) with what ScienceNews called a spatial light modulator. Most researchers thought that OAM beams were unstable in fiber. That was until Siddharth Ramachandran, an electrical engineer, and leader of the Boston University team designed an optical fiber that can propagate the twisted light. The BU team created an OAM fiber with four modes (varying index of refraction an optical fiber typically has two modes) and showed that for each mode, they could send data through a one-kilometer fiber in different colors, resulting in a transmission capacity of 1.6 terabits per second.

spatial light modulator.The DARPA-funded search for ways to squeeze ever more information into the fiber-optic cables that carry it could not come at a better time as mobile devices fuels rapidly growing demands on the Internet. BU’s Ramachandran told Futurity.org, “Our discovery …  has profound implications for a variety of scientific and technological fields that have exploited the unique properties of OAM-carrying light, including the use of such beams for enhancing data capacity in fibers.”  The result is more data in the same length of cable. Science (subscription required) published the new research in its June 28 edition.

10 beams of twisted light in custom fiber

The spiral beams can be combined with existing bandwidth boosting techniques, such as sending many beams through a cable at once according to the author. The spiral beams are sent along different paths and made to be different colors, which differentiates them and lowers the computing necessary to process them once they reach their destination.

Mad scientistThe researchers say they can send up to 10 concurrent beams through their custom fiber. They hope to squeeze more data into each of those beams using methods already exploited by the telecom industry. “We showed a new degree of freedom in which we could transmit information,” says Professor Ramachandran.

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As this technology sits now, it has limited use. The 1.1 Km distance will limit it to the data center, once Cisco (CSCO), Intel (INTC), and HP (HPQ) figure out how to deal with the data.

orbital angular momentumThen there is the issue of re-wiring the backbone with new cables to accept the OAM beams, at&t alone has 77,000 route miles (PDF) of fiber optic cable in the U.S. The BU professor told GigaOM that the team manufactured its fiber at a commercial facility using standard methods, so if it were mass-produced, the fiber should not cost much more than those now in use.

The current speed record, set in 2011, is 100 Tbps, 1.6 Tbps seems kind of wimpy in comparison. which is faster than this cable.

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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.

Patent Trolls Cost the US $29 Billion

Patent Trolls Cost the US $29 BillionThe United States patent system is costing the industry more than $29 billion a year in unnecessary legal fees. A Boston University study crunched the numbers and worked out that the legal action conducted by “patent trolls” cost U.S. companies an estimated $29 billion during 2011.

United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) logoFortune defines patent trolls as entities that own the intellectual rights to innovations without innovating anything themselves, so-called “non-practicing entities.” They buy patents to sue infringers. According to the study, last year, 1,150 companies defended themselves against 5,842 patent troll lawsuits. Nearly half of those companies made less than $100 million during the year, which showed the authors that patent trolls aren’t just a problem for large firms, but rather a problem for smaller firms who have less money to invest in their own research.

The result is that the companies lost $29 billion in direct costs – legal and licensing fees. The study did not estimate indirect losses for defendants in things like delays in new products, loss of market share, or the need to change products.

Study authors James Bessen and Michael Meurer also found that the patent troll costs have escalated since 2005 when the study found a total of 1,401 claims were $6.6 billion in direct costs. The authors say increasing patent litigation in the U.S. is a significant tax on investment in innovation. To put the figure into perspective the total U.S. spending on research and development is $249 billion in 2009 but it is still a big tax.

Bessen and Meurer said it was rubbish that asserting patents played a socially valuable role in enabling small inventors to realize greater profits from their ideas. The report said that the costs of defending such legal action meant these organizations had less money to invest in their own research. The report claims that patent lawsuits were a social loss and not a transfer of wealth as the trolls claim.

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I have followed patent trolls for a while here, here, and here.

The ineptitude of Washington to do anything right enables patent trolls. The report concludes “The rapid growth and high cost of NPE litigation …  should set off an alarm warning [to] policymakers that the patent system still needs significant reform to make it a truly effective”

Most reasonable people should agree with the study’s recommendation to increase transparency in the patent system and that the courts should rigorously supervise patent damages awards to make sure that damages are proportional to the value of the patented technology.

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  • Patent Absurdity: Trolling the Courts for Profits (aleksandreia.com)

 

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.