telecom technologies presentation monday, april 30, 2007 from 2:30-4:00 pm best viewed by screen...
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Telecom Technologies PresentationMonday, April 30, 2007 from 2:30-4:00 PM
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Advanced Telecom and Broadband Deployment In Arizona
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council (ATIC)
Communications Infrastructure Advisory Committee (CIAC) of Governor’s Council on Innovation and Technology (GCIT)
Telecom Technologies Overview PresentationMonday, April 30, 2007 from 2:30-4:00 PM
By Mark Goldstein, International Research Center
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Welcome Telecom Summit May 17, 2007 at the Mesa Convention Center Third of four Online Pre-Summit Briefing Sessions – Background
information, technology overviews, updates on Arizona issues and initiatives, best practices, etc. April 9 - Updates on Arizona issues and initiatives (now
available for audio only access) April 19 – Community Planning, Town of Superior, and
Telecommunication Issues in Indian Country (view the web conference)
April 30 – Overview of Telecom Technologies (will be online after session)
May 10 – Issues and Challenges from the Telecom Providers Perspective (will be online after session)
See Summit Web Site www.tucsonlink.org/Summit07
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Thanks to Cox and iLinc Communications
Providers of Audio and Web Conferencing
for the Arizona Telecom Summit 2007
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Agenda Welcome – Steve Peters, Summit Coordinator
iLinc and Web Conferencing Instructions Cox Communications – Josh Nelson
The Summit Overview – Steve Peters, Summit Coordinator
Welcome - AT&T and Strategic Technology Communications
ATIC/CIAC Overview – Steve Peters
Telecom Technology Presentation – Mark Goldstein, President, International Research Center and ATIC Secretary
DSL, Cable, Cellular, Wi-Fi, WiMAX, UWB, Fiber, Broadband over Power Line (BPL), Free Space Optics (FSO), and More
Telecommunications Provider Panel
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Purpose of the Summit
Like water and roads, advanced telecommunications and broadband Internet services are critical infrastructure for Arizona communities
Many rural and other underserved communities lack the infrastructure to support deployment of these services
The purpose of the Summit is to accelerate deployment of these services to all Arizona communities
The plan is to explore options and leave the Summit with consensus on policies and implementation plans to remove barriers to the deployment of this critical infrastructure.
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Summit Events Pre and Post Briefing Documents on the Summit Web Site
Four Online Pre-Summit Briefing Sessions – Background information, technology overviews, updates on Arizona issues and initiatives, best practices, etc. (Will be online after Session)
One day May 17 Summit event – Mesa Convention Center Keynote Presentations Planning and Policy Development Workshops (State Strategic
Telecom Plan, Funding mechanisms and strategies, Rights-of-Way access, Local community/Tribal planning and policies, Telecom provider requirements
Telecom/Technology Expo Arizona Technology Council After5 Reception, Showcase and
Networking Event
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Presented By Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Communications Infrastructure Advisory Committee to GCIT, the Governor’s Council on Innovation & Technology
In Cooperation With
Arizona Consumers Council
Arizona Association for Economic Development
Arizona Department of Commerce
Arizona Government Information Technology Agency
Arizona Small Business Association
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Presented By
County Supervisor’s Association of Arizona
Arizona Technology Council
Arizona Telemedicine Program
eLearning System For Arizona Teachers and Students
Greater Arizona eLearning Association
League of Arizona Cities and Towns
Navajo Nation Telecommunications Regulatory Commission
Community Information and Telecommunications Alliance
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Participants Invited
Federal, state, local, and tribal elected officials and policy advisors
Chief Information Officers
Telecom service provider executives
Key stakeholder representatives (economic development, education, government, health services, public safety, libraries, homeland security, CIOs, etc)
Thanks to Our Sponsors
Silver Cox Communications TeleSpectra Salt River Project Telecom Conterra Ultra Broadband Arizona State Library Archives
and Public Records
Exhibitors Sky Catcher Communications SkyPilot Networks Global Investment Recovery Tierra Right of Way Services Triad Wireless CellularOne Starnet Data Design
Conferencing iLinc Communications Cox Business Services
Platinum
Gold
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
ATIC and CIAC
Steve Peters, Summit Coordinator
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Non Profit 501(c)(6) organization engages in initiatives and guides adoption of public policies that enable access to advanced telecommunications services and information technologies
Public and private partners include:
Large and small businesses
Health care, economic development, consumer organizations
Libraries, educational institutions,
Arizona Corporation Commission and legislature, local and state government agencies
Information technology and telecommunications companies
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
ATIC Initiatives
Telecom Planning with CIAC
Strategy Committee
Cyber Security
Arizona Corporation Commission Debates
Arizona Telecommunications Directory
Homeland Security (DHS) I-19 First Responder Wi-Fi Grant
Arizona Telecom Roundtable (2005) and Arizona Telecom Summit 2007
Town Of Superior Initiative
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Communications Infrastructure Advisory Committee
CIAC is a 21 member Public/Private Committee of the Governor’s Council on Innovation & Technology (GCIT)
Advises GCIT on policies and strategies to close the Digital Divide in Arizona
CIAC, in cooperation with ATIC, is charting a long-range roadmap and strategic plan to overcome barriers to statewide broadband deployment
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
CIAC Four Priorities
State Strategic Telecom Plan
Arizona Broadband Development Authority
Leadership, Planning and Coordination
Funding mechanisms and strategies
Rights-of-Way access
Local community/Tribal planning and policies
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Major CIAC Accomplishments
Coordinated the 2005 Statewide Network Request For Information (RFI) to better understand the requirements of telecom providers. Responses included barriers, issues, costs, relations between telecom providers, and community solutions
Adopted, and facilitated GCIT approval of, 11 strategy and policy recommendations that provide a framework for CIAC initiatives
Provided an ongoing nexus and forum for discussion of Arizona Broadband initiatives and policy (working closely with ATIC)
Created 3 CIAC Task Forces (State Strategic Plan, Rights-of-Way, Broadband Authority)
Supported Arizona Broadband Initiative Framework Report 2007 by Center for Digital Government - Funded by GITA and CEDC – Now available on the Web Site
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
CIAC Reports
Background Reports prepared by the GCIT Telecom Infrastructure Subcommittee (now CIAC)
2005 Statewide Network Request For Information (RFI)
CIAC 2006 Year in Review
Arizona Broadband Initiative Framework Report- Digital Government Funded by the Government Information Technology Agency and the Commerce and Economic Development Commission (CEDC)
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
Governor’ Council on Innovation and Technology
Governor's principal advisory group for innovation and technology charged with developing strategies to:
Enable Arizona to become a global leader in innovation and technology research, development and product creation
Strengthen the Arizona innovation and technology infrastructure (including telecom and capital formation)
Promote technology transfer and business/university partnerships
Create and retain quality jobs in Arizona
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
ATIC Telecom Technologies Overview Monday, April 30, 2007
By Mark Goldstein, President, International Research Center and ATIC Secretary
DSL, Cable, Cellular, Wi-Fi, WiMAX, UWB, Fiber, Broadband over Power Line (BPL),
Free Space Optics (FSO), and More
• Cable - Josh Nelson, VP Information and Network Technology, Cox Communications
• Wireless - Allan Meiusi, CEO, WI-VOD
• Wireline & Cellular - Thomas Thomas, AT&T
Telecommunications Provider Panel
Connect and Communicate
2007 International Research Center (http://www.researchedge.com/)
Source: International Research Center (http://www.researchedge.com/)
Modern Home Network Example
Alexander Graham Bell lived at 5 Exeter Place when resuming residence in Boston in January 1876. Here the telephone first transmitted a complete and intelligible sentence, “Mr. Watson, come here I want to see you” on March 10, 1876. Pictured above on February 12, 1877 are Thomas A. Watson, a Boston Globe reporter, and witnesses participating in a demonstration with Bell who was 14 miles away in Salem, MA. Source: IEEE Boston Section (http://ieeeboston.org/)
Source: Qwest Communications
Source: Covad Communications Group (http://www.covad.com/)
DSL Varieties and Characteristics
Services &
Applications
Service Transport
Network
Hybrid Fiber Coax
(HFC) Network
Enterprise & ResidentialSubscribers
SUPER HEADENDSatelliteFeeds
Video FileServers Off-Air
OSSNetwork
and ServiceManagement
Large BusinessesSchools & Government
Single-Family Dwellings
Small BusinessSchools & Government
Fiber Node
LineExtenderTaps
Bridger
Hub
Hub
Hub
Hub
Hub
DataServices
Hub
Fiber Node
SONET/ATM Trunking Ring
Voice Services (DMS-500 & MCS)Internet
Cable Hybrid Fiber Coax (HFC) Network Overview
Cable Combines Local Access Architecture with Internet Access
Source: International Research Center (http://www.researchedge.com/)
Source: The BRIDGE (http://www.mediabiz.com/)
http://www.cablelabs.com/
Basic Broadband over Power Line (BPL) System
Source: National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners2/05 (NARUC - http://www.naruc.org/)
SOURCE: United Power Line Council (UPLC - http://www.uplc.org/), 1/06
Broadband Power Line (BPL) Trials and Commercial Deployments
First Version of a Mobile Radio Telephone (1924)
Source: Bell Labs (http://www.bell-labs.com/)
10 GHz
100 GHz
Comparison of Cellular and PCS Spectrum
Cellular System Covering Urban and Rural Areas
Handoff from Adjacent Cells
Source: Tower Maps (http://www.towermaps.com/)
U.S. Commercial Wireless Antenna Facilities
Wireless Service Provider MarketConsolidation from 1990s to Present
AT&T
Alltel
T-Mobile
Modified by International Research Center
( )
42
Growth in the Mobile Telephone Industry
(June 2005 - June 2006)
UP9%
From $56Billion as of
2005
DOWN14% From
$0.08 per minute in
2005
Subscribers ServiceRevenues
Price per minute
219 MillionSubscribers in
2006
$60 Billion inRevenues in
2006
Price per minute 7¢ in 2006
Source: Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Association; FCC.
UP16%From 623 MOUs in
2005
Minutes of Use
723 Average Monthly MOUs in
2006
UP13% From
195 Million Subscribers
in 2005
Performance Evolution of Cellular Technologies
Source: Wipro Technologies/TechOnLine 4/05 (http://www.techonline.com/)
Source: U.S. Display Consortium
The Ultimate Handheld Device
OSPlatformVendors
Handset &AccessoryEquipment
Vendors
CommercialAudio/MusicDownloads
Mobile VirtualNetwork
Operators(MVNO)
3G/4G MobileNetwork
Operators(MNO)
MobilePortal
Providers
ContentAggregators/Management Mobile
EquipmentRetailers
MobileConsumers
Web BrowsingText/HTML/XML
(News, Ref)
Social & UserGenerated
Content (UGC)
Streaming Audio(Podcasts,
Internet Radio)
Network &Commercial
Video on Web
InteractiveContent
(VR, Gaming)
MobileComponent/
HardwareManufacturers
MobileInfrastructure
EquipmentVendors
ContentDistribution
Networks(CDN)
Real-TimeOptimization(QoS, Scaling,Transcoding)
OpenWeb
Mobile Content Market EcosystemContent
Hardware
Peer-to-Peer(P2P)
Distribution
EnterpriseContent &
Collaboration
Voice overInternet
Protocol (VoIP)(To IP & PSTN)
Aggregation Distribution
Home Media(Audio, TV, DVD,
Media Server)
AlternativeTerrestrialWireless
(Wi-FI, WiMAXUWB, DVB-H)
SatelliteDelivery
(Radio, TV?)
Delivery
Place Shifting(Remote Access,
Slingbox, Orb)
Misc. Services(Ad Insertions,
LBS/Telematics,DRM & Payment
Flow)
Misc. Tools & ApplicationsContent Authoring/Adaptation/Management, Middleware, OSS,
Application Platforms, GUISource: International Research Center
© 2007 (http://www.researchedge.com/)
Uplink
UAT Phoenix War Driving Research ProjectUAT Phoenix War Driving Research ProjectWi-Fi Access Points & Devices in Downtown Phoenix (2005)Wi-Fi Access Points & Devices in Downtown Phoenix (2005)
Source: Fluke Networks (http://www.flukenetworks.com/)
Source: The Burton Group
Comparison of 802.11x WLAN Technologies
A-Bridge
I-19 Highway
Orthogon Link
B Bridge
Elephant Head
Long Horn
Tubac FH #1
Peck Canyon
All State
Hill Top House
Thomas Produce
Landfill
Rio Rico
UES 25 Ridge Ct
UES 2358 W. Frontage Rd
UES 1956 W Frontage
Aqua Linda Pole
UES 28506 E Frontage
UES 2960 W Frontage
UES 2782 W Frontage
Waste Station
Todd’s Ranch
Rex Ranch
L&M Produce
Rio Rico Tower Rio Rio Fire Hall #1
Neubauer
Rio Rio Fire Hall #2
Steve Scoggin
Dedicated Bridge
WI-VOD CommunicationsCurrent Node LocationsAlong I-19
ATIC DHS WiFi Security Projectfor First Respondersin Southern Arizona
http://www.arizonatele.com/atic/wireless/
http://www.ruckuswireless.com/
Ruckus MetroFlex Wireless Access Gateway
• Local Information & Services• Portal(s), Directory & Live Assist, Maps, Tours, Transactions, …
• High-Speed Internet Access• Browse, Communicate, Telework• Residents, Workers & Visitors• Fixed Location & Nomadic
• Virtual Private Networks (VPN)• Rich Media Delivery
• Voice over Internet Protocol• Audio & Video Mobile Media• Time & Place Shifted Content from Remote Servers/Sources• Gaming & Social Networking
• Targeted Advertising• Location-Based & Demographic
• Location Based Services• GPS &/or Wi-Fi Location Fix• Telehealth & Telemedicine
• Video Camera Transmissions• Traffic & Security Apps• Citizen Interests such as Street & Pedestrian Traffic, Cultural & Amenity Locales, Weather
• Public Network Resiliency• Emergency/Disaster Response
• Public Safety Use & AVL/GIS• Biological & Environmental Sensor Networks for Monitoring
• Biometric, NFC & RFID Data• Traffic Control & Signage• Parking & Utility Meters
Wi-Fi - The Applications LandscapeWi-Fi - The Applications Landscape
WiMAX
-WiMAX
Standard Radio Transmission with Continuous Sine WavesVersus Ultra-Wide Band (UWB) Coherent Pulses
Continuous sine waves are transmitted with information embedded in the
modulation of the wave's amplitude or frequency. This technology is
approaching its limit in being able to improve bandwidth (amount of
information sent) and channelization (number of users).
Coded pulses, transmitted and measured precisely in time can carry orders of magnitude more data and
support an essentially unlimited number of users. (Think of it as super high-
speed Morse Code with 40 million dots and dashes per second.)
Source: Time Domain Corporation
Source: The New York Times 1/24/06
Source: Institute for the Future 5/05 (http://www.iftf.org/)
RFID as a Tracking Technology 1945–2010
A prototype of a tiny wireless chip capable of storing and transmitting data was recently revealed by HP. When the new Memory Spot chip hits the market in about two years, it will enable a variety of applications ranging from digital wristbands that store patient medical information to a new form of storing digital versions of documents or sound bytes on paper and printed pictures that can be accessed using a reader-equipped device.Source: The Future of Things 10/9/06 (http://www.tfot.info/)
How Satellite Data Distribution Works
Source: PC Magazine, 2/12/02
HALO by Angel Technologies5-50 Mbps, ATM-based
HELIOS by NASA100,000’ UAV
SkyStation<2 Mbps, 3G & Wi-FiEst. Avail. 2005
Stratospheric Wireless Platform Examples
Space Data Corp. Balloon-Launched Wireless Platforms
http://www.spacedata.net/
http://www.sanswire.com/
Source: Light Reading
Optical Network Hierarchy
Source: Lightwave Magazine, June 2001
APON Applications
ATM backbone
ONT-L
APON Ring
EDFA
DLCT1
Video Head-End
Data + Video Overlay
DLC
ONT
ADSLVDSL
OLT
OLT
VideoServer
CentralOffice
OperationCenter
FTTBSONETReplacement
FTTC / FTT-Riser
Internal T1Substitution
FTTBT1Replacement
FTTH
ONT
Source: Alcatel
Source: LightPointe
Free Space Optic (FSO) Systems
Complex Metro FSO Topology
Source: Free Space Optics (http://www.freespaceoptics.org/)
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council
ATIC Telecom Technologies Overview Monday, April 30, 2007
By Mark Goldstein, President, International Research Center and ATIC Secretary
DSL, Cable, Cellular, Wi-Fi, WiMAX, UWB, Fiber, Broadband over Power Line (BPL),
Free Space Optics (FSO), and More
• Cable - Josh Nelson, VP Information and Network Technology, Cox Communications
• Wireless - Allan Meiusi, CEO, WI-VOD
• Wireline & Cellular - Thomas Thomas, AT&T
Telecommunications Provider Panel
Advanced Telecom and Broadband Deployment In Arizona
Arizona Telecommunications and Information Council (ATIC)
Communications Infrastructure Advisory Committee (CIAC) of Governor’s Council on Innovation and Technology (GCIT)
Telecom Technologies Overview PresentationMonday, April 30, 2007 from 2:30-4:00 PM
By Mark Goldstein, International Research Center