Tag Archive for Gigabit

2Gbps Coming To Detroit

2Gbps Coming To DetroitNot so long ago, Comcast was leaving Detroit. Now, the embattled cable provider has announced a 2 Gbps fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) campaign in Motown. FierceTelecom reports that Comcast will bring its Gigabit Pro service to about 1.5 million homes in Michigan. The service will be offered to residential customers in Detroit, Flint, Grand Rapids, Jackson, and Lansing. Tim Collins, senior VP of Comcast’s Heartland Region, said in a release that the company’s move into Michigan is designed to address “tech-savvy residents who have a need for even faster speeds.

a need for even faster speedsSimilar to other markets, Detroit customers that live near Comcast’s fiber network will be eligible to get Gigabit Pro service. Comcast technicians will install an optical network terminal and related equipment at the customer’s home for the service. In addition to the metro-Detroit area, Comcast plans to offer the service in Benton Harbor and St. Joseph (as part of the Greater Chicago region).

Options in Detroit

Comcast has not yet disclosed what it will charge Detroiters for the Gigabit Pro offering. The author cites a DSL Reports article where Comcast was planning a $299 per month price tag for the service. That price would make it much more expensive than it competition. Google charge $70 per month for Google Fiber service or AT&T‘s (T) $120 per month charge for its gigabit services. However, it’s unclear if Comcast will adhere to that pricing when it does launch the service.

The article says today, Comcast charges $399.95 a month for its 505 Mbps tier. An Ars Technica report said Comcast’s 2 Gbps service will cost less than that. It also said that all 505 Mbps customers will be upgraded to the new Gigabit Pro service. As the MSO tries to work out pricing, it decided to delay the initial May release of the service in Detroit to a new, undetermined date.

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Let’s be honest, the real hero here is Dan Gilbert and his Rocket Fiber project. As has been the case where Google Fiber has gone in, the other players suddenly show an interest in that market. I predict a win for RocketFiber, because Mr. Gilbert’s people understand customer service and Comcast hates its customers.

 

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.

802.3bt More Power to the People’s Devices

802.3bt More Power to the People's DevicesPower over Ethernet (PoE) powers more than one million end devices today. To continue PoE’s success, the IEEE is answering the market’s demands for more power by developing 802.3bt the third generation of PoE.

The first generation of PoE (2003), 802.3af delivered 12.95 Watts. The second generation, 802.3at (2009) provides 25.5 Watts to the equipment. The new version of PoE will address the need for higher-power PoE. The IEEE has proposed a new standard, 802.3bt, which promises to double the power output of the current 802.3at standard. The new 802.3bt standard, scheduled to be released in 2017, will also adjust PoE to work with 10Gbase-T.

IEEE logoCabling Installation & Maintenance Magazine provides an excellent overview of the new standard. They report that the IEEE 802 LAN/MAN Standards Committee which develops and maintains networking standards like Ethernet, VLANs, and Wireless LAN, is developing the new standard. The DTE Power via MDI over 4-Pair Task Force is working to specify a set of next-generation PoE specifications, and the levels of power likely to be delivered ultimately via the 802.3bt standard will still work on twisted-pair cable, possibly as a four-pair PoE specification which could improve energy efficiency and offer greater power.

New POE Applications

IndustryApplicationTypical Power Consumption
HealthcareNurse call system30-50W
RetailPoint of sale system30-60W
BankingIP Turrets45W
Building ManagementVariable air volume controllers, Access controllers40-50W
Enterprise ITThin clients, Virtual desktop terminals50W
HospitalityPOE switches45-60W
Premise SecurityPTZ cameras30-60W
IndustrialBrushless drives, Motor control>30W
VariousDigital signage>30W
VariousMultichannel wireless access points>30W
via CommScope

The new PoE standard will support 10GBase-T. The 10GBase-T standard uses all 4 pairs to send data. These facts will force the IEEE 802.3bt committee to figure out how to keep the power from interfering with the data on the same wires to supply a minimum of 49 watts at the powered device. One of the key parameters the article mentions is to limit pair-to-pair current imbalance.

POE logoOther goals for the 802.3bt standard are: to be backward-compatible with “af” and “at.” and increased energy efficiency. According to the article, a global move to 4-pair POE systems would create potential energy savings of 60.8 million kilowatt-hours which would prevent greenhouse gasses from 66 million pounds of coal saved annually.

Paul Vanderlaan, technical manager of cable maker Berk-Tek – Nexans’ advanced design and applications lab and other cabling-industry technical experts believe that 802.3bt’s support of 10GBase-T means that the minimum twisted-pair cabling system requirement will increase.  In order to support 10GBase-T, it seems likely that a Category 6A system will be the recommendation. The author notes that the IEEE does not address cabling performance, that is the focus of groups like the TIA or ISO/IEC.

The transition to the new PoE standard will not be simple. CommScope published a white paper where they explain:

Category 6A cabling… Category 5e cabling only provides the minimum level of performance required. Therefore, it is recommended to use Category 6 or Category 6A cabling-preferably solutions … 

Berk-Tek’s Vanderlaan explained why Category 6A cabling is the preferred system. He summarizes the electrical-engineering calculations;

As a general rule, increased copper content, or larger gauge size, will aid in power delivery … when you migrate … you should see larger gauge sizes and more copper content.

system performance characteristicsUnder the new standard users will have to pay attention to new cabling-system performance characteristics like DC resistance unbalance and pair-to-pair resistance imbalance.  The higher wattage’s up to 1 full amp (1,00 milliamps) will present challenges to performance requirements. Mr. Vanderlaan told Cabling Installation & Maintenance Magazine:

For users, cable selection will be based not just on the speed that can be supported, but rather on speed as well as power delivery. What you simply plug in today, you may want to also power in the future.

A new challenge cable plant owners will have to consider is heat. CommScope explains that heat generated within bundles of cables supporting IEEE 802.3bt could rise enough to effect performance.

ambient temperature… the temperature of the cabling will rise due to heat generation in the copper conductors  … the temperature of the cable bundle higher than the ambient temperature of the surrounding environment … The IEEE 802.3bt four-pair PoE standard is expected to assume a maximum temperature rise of 10 degrees Celsius (50 degrees F) when all four pairs are energized … the ambient temperature should not exceed 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees F) … CommScope recommends Category 6A cabling for four-pair PoE applications. Because increased thermal loading can also increase insertion loss, the maximum cable length should be de-rated for higher temperatures, per ANSI/TIA-568-C.2.

Several vendors have already released pre-standard device-powering systems to meet users’ current needs.

As in the pre-PoE standard days, Cisco (CSCO) has marketed proprietary PoE systems since 2011. Cisco’s Universal Power Over Ethernet (UPOE) technology, which delivers 60 watts of power to devices powered by the Catalyst 4500E; some of those devices include Cisco IP phones, personal telepresence systems, compact switches and wireless access points.

Also, the non-standard Power Over HDBase-T (POH) was introduced by the HDBase-T Alliance a trade group that promotes and standardizes HDBase-T technology for whole-home distribution of uncompressed high-definition (HD) multimedia content. This system delivers up to 100 watts of power to TVs and other devices over distances up to 100 meters/320 feet via one Category 5e or 6 cable with standard RJ45 connectors.

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The new standard is a welcome addition to the toolkit. Cost savings is one of the appeals to PoE. On many projects, PoE low voltage contractors can do the work rather than electrical contractors. If the new system pushes the maximum rate to 75W at the devices as some predict, with there be a backlash from the EC’s and authorities having jurisdiction? Time will tell.

In the meantime, the article says owners and managers should check their current infrastructure with eyes toward how the next generation of devices might be powered via more-capable PoE technology.

Of course, it is always a good idea to pull out your acceptance documentation to understand the installed base of the cable and the likelihood that the cable has the electrical performance characteristics required to support the next generation of PoE.

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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.

Quicken Fiber Coming to the D

Quicken Fiber Coming to the DCrain’s Detroit Business is reporting that real estate mogul, Lebron James’ boss, founder and chairman of Quicken Loans Inc., Dan Gilbert announced the formation of a new Detroit-based high-speed Internet provider to bring service to downtown Detroit –  Rocket Fiber LLC. Mr. Gilbert (@cavsdan) tweeted:

Rocket Fiber LLCYes, it’s true @RocketFiber coming to downtown Detroit in near future. Fast as Google or faster. Details in a few weeks pic.twitter.com/fTPRSbauoN

Mr. Gilbert formed Rocket Fiber LLC in 2014. He called the company a “community investment initiative.” Matt Cullen, president and CEO of Rock Ventures, called the new network “the generational leap forward” – leapfrogging where the city is at this point. It’s starting in the downtown and hopefully spreading out to the neighborhoods. There is some interest along the riverfront.Fiber optic cable

The first wave of installations will happen in the downtown area between the Lodge on the west, I-375 to the east, and I-75 to the north. Rocket Fiber will expand services to residents and businesses in Midtown Detroit along the Woodward corridor.

Crain’s reports that construction is already happening on the “advanced fiber-optic network.” The system will use hard-wired fiber-optic lines that will be connected to buildings. Users will connect devices in their homes or businesses by either an Ethernet cable or WI-Fi. An outdoor Wi-Fi offering also will be available, Rock Ventures said.

Rocket FiberThe effort is not entirely altruistic. Undoubtedly part of the project will be to connect the Quicken campus downtown to the new Corktown technical center Bedrock is building at Rosa Parks and Porter which includes a 10,000-square-foot server room.

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Mr. Gilbert is doing something ATT or Comcast could or would not do. – I worked on a job in the City to bring in 12 AT&T (T) POTS and Comcast (CMCSA) Business circuits.

Quicken Loans Data Center - Curbed– OMG – It took ATT a week to get the last three POTS lines in and Comcast projected 6 months to install a city block away from Ford Field and 100 yards from a known working drop. (and now they are going to stop service in Detroit). Thankfully 123.net was able to get the customer up, working on time and budget.  

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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.

A Close Look at 802.11ac Wi-Fi

TA Close Look at 802.11ac Wi-Fiech pundits argue that the new Wi-Fi standard 802.11ac will replace wired gigabit Ethernet networking. 802.11ac is a supercharged version of 802.11n, offering link speeds ranging from 433 Mbps, up to multiple gigabits per second.

Wi-FiTo make 802.11ac dozens of times faster than 802.11n, the new standard works exclusively in the 5GHz band uses a huge chunk of bandwidth (80 or 160MHz), operates in up to eight spatial streams (MIMO), and a technology called beamforming.

At its core, 802.11ac is essentially an updated version of 802.11n, according to Sebastian Anthony the author of an ExtremeTech article “What is 802.11ac WiFi, and how much faster than 802.11n is it?” 802.11n was a huge performance increase over 802.11a and g. 802.11n introduced some key technologies that brought massive speed boosts. Where 802.11n had support for four spatial streams (4×4 MIMO) and a channel width of 40MHz, 802.11ac can use eight spatial streams and has channels up to 80MHz wide, which can be combined to make 160MHz channels. This means that 802.11ac has 8 x 160MHz of spectral bandwidth to play with, versus 4 x 40MHz – a huge difference that allows 802.11ac to send vast amounts of data across the airwaves.

Beamforming

What is new in Wi-Fi

802.11ac also introduces 256-QAM modulation (up from 64-QAM in 802.11n), which sends 256 different signals over the same frequency by shifting each signal to a slightly different phase. In theory, this quadruples the spectral efficiency of 802.11ac over 802.11n. Spectral efficiency is a measure of how well a given wireless protocol/modulation/multiplexing technique uses the bandwidth available to it.

802.11ac also introduces standardized beamforming Matthew Gast, Director of Product Management at AeroHive Networks published an article, “Investing in Beamforming: Is it worth it?” that explains beamforming.

Aerohive logoRather than transmitting a radio signal in all directions, beamforming figures out where the receiver is, and focus the energy towards the receiver. Instead of spraying radio energy all over the place, send packets as a “rifle shot” directly to the receiver’s antenna Mr.Gast explains.

Beamforming is a two-step process: First, figure out how to “aim” the transmission at the receiver, and second, send the transmission. With beamforming, a transmitter is betting that by paying the cost of the channel measurement process, the data transmission that follows will speed up enough to pay off the cost.

802.11n Beamforming was non-standardized, in 802.11ac, there is only one method of beamforming, called the Null Data Packet (NDP). (rb- Read the AeroHive article for a full description of NDP)

Aerohive’s Gast concludes that by steering the energy towards a receiver, beamforming enables you to take a step up to a higher data rate. Mr. Gast estimates that 802.11-based beamforming gives you a 3-5 dB gain.

802.11ac is speedyIn theory, at the 5GHz band with beamforming, 802.11ac should have the same or better range than 802.11n  However, Mr. Anthony says the 5GHz band, has less penetration power so it doesn’t have the same range as 2.4GHz (802.11b/g). The ExtremeTech article concludes that’s an acceptable trade-off: there simply isn’t enough spectral bandwidth in the cluttered 2.4GHz band to allow for 802.11ac’s gigabit-level speeds.

ExtremeTech‘s Anthony calculates there are two answers to how fast is Wi-Fi 802.11ac, the theoretical max speed, and the practical max speed that mere mortals will get surrounded by lots of signal-attenuating obstacles.

He calculates the theoretical max speed of 802.11ac is eight 160MHz 256-QAM channels, each of which is capable of 866.7Mbps – a grand total of 6,933Mbps, or just shy of 7Gbps. That’s a transfer rate of 900 megabytes per second. Compare this with 802.11n’s max theoretical speed, which was 600Mbps. He then says in practice, the current max speed of 802.11ac devices is 1.7Gbps.

ExtremeTech points out there will be a second wave of 802.11ac devices – due in 2014 after the standard is finalized – before 160MHz channels and multi-gigabit speeds become a reality. The max speed over an 80MHz channel is 433.3Mbps, and there aren’t any 802.11ac chipsets that support up to eight streams.

Broadcom logoKevin Fitchard at GigaOM reports that recently the Wi-Fi Alliance kicked off its 802.11ac certification program. First to get the official Wi-Fi stamp of approval was the Samsung Mega 6.3, followed by two other Samsung models.

As with the 802.11n certification process, the Wi-Fi equipment makers are moving faster than the standards bodies. The IEEE is actually still putting the finishing touches on the 802.11ac standard, which is not due until 2014.

Wi-Fi certifiedThe Wi-Fi Alliance expects the first batch of ac devices will support speeds of 433 Mbps and progress into more advanced levels of the standard. The Alliance has pre-certified systems from companies like Broadcom (BRCM), Qualcomm (QCOM), Realtek, and Marvell (MRVL). Cisco (CSCO) was one of the first vendors to get an access point certified.

“AC is going into mobile and portable devices first…,” Wi-Fi Alliance Marketing and Program Management Director Kelly Davis-Felner said. ABI Research estimates that 40 percent of all ac devices shipped in 2013 will be handsets.

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Wi-Fi will replace wired Ethernet networkingWhile tech pundits argue that the new 802.11ac Wi-Fi will replace wired gigabit Ethernet networking at home and in the office. While the consumerization of IT and BYOD are strong forces, the life-cycle of cabling infrastructure is 25 years, a cost not lightly abandoned in the walls. it is more likely to happen at home first. Who wants all the crappy wires running all over the house?

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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.