Alcatel-Lucent's XG-FAST Pushes 10,000Mbps Over Copper Phone Lines 149
Mark.JUK (1222360) writes The Bell Labs R&D division of telecoms giant Alcatel-Lucent has today claimed to set a new world record after they successfully pushed "ultra-broadband" speeds of 10,000 Megabits per second (Mbps) down a traditional copper telephone line using XG-FAST technology, which is an extension of G.fast (ITU G.9700).
G.fast is a hybrid-fiber technology, which is designed to deliver Internet speeds of up to 1000Mbps over runs of copper cable (up to around 250 meters via 106MHz+ radio spectrum). The idea is that a fiber optic cable is taken closer to homes and then G.fast works to deliver the last few meters of service, which saves money because the operator doesn't have to dig up your garden to lay new cables. XG-FAST works in a similar way but via an even shorter run of copper and using frequencies of up to 500MHz. For example, XG-FAST delivered its top speed of 10,000Mbps by bonding two copper lines together over just 30 meters of cable.
G.fast is a hybrid-fiber technology, which is designed to deliver Internet speeds of up to 1000Mbps over runs of copper cable (up to around 250 meters via 106MHz+ radio spectrum). The idea is that a fiber optic cable is taken closer to homes and then G.fast works to deliver the last few meters of service, which saves money because the operator doesn't have to dig up your garden to lay new cables. XG-FAST works in a similar way but via an even shorter run of copper and using frequencies of up to 500MHz. For example, XG-FAST delivered its top speed of 10,000Mbps by bonding two copper lines together over just 30 meters of cable.
However this begs the question.... (Score:1)
Re:However this begs the question.... (Score:5, Informative)
To what, the DSLAM? A few microseconds. To the IP drain? The same as before. Also, this does not beg the question.
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To the IP drain? The same as before.
So 20 milliseconds? Like in other DSL technologies.
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20 milliseconds to what? Google? That's going to be dependent entirely on the ISPs transport network and peering locations, and the access technology won't affect it at all (assuming it's not congested).
The latency from the customer to the broadband gateway router in the ISPs office is going to be similar to a LAN.
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First-hop latency on VDSL2 is less than one third that...
My first-hop latency is 12ms, and that includes a 600 kilometer journey from my DSLAM to my ISP's closest PoP in another province.
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That's because you're on an interleaved profile rather than fastpath. Your ISP has, on your line, sacrificed latency for improved error correction.
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The latency isn't a by product of DSL technologies. It is caused by Interleaving.
If you are happy with a slightly slower connection, you can get lower latency but it must go slower to prevent errors.
Its usually a setting on your router, with Interleaving always enabled by default.
http://whirlpool.net.au/wiki/a... [whirlpool.net.au]
big up your garden? (Score:3)
All my telco worker friends grumble about being forced to praise their customers' horticultural skills on their site visits.
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All the honeys stop by and praise my edging, and people can't stop talking about the D's on my lawnmower.
Re:big up your garden? (Score:5, Funny)
Big ups to my garden, big ups to my hoe.
What the dill w/ my weeds and my dill-yo?
Gotta keep the green flowing round my grill-yo.
My lyrics is tight.
My rhymes on target.
I drop fatter beets
Than a farmer's market.
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oh shit.....I fell out of my chair laughing. That hurt.
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Damn. Wish there was a once year mod point for +6.
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Up to 250m? (Score:5, Insightful)
So in real life, around 20m, give or take 12m.
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No, probably around 100-200m is the more realistic outcome. Which is enough for an average residential building. In a taller building where this range isn't enough, there's usually some sort of a panel mid way where you can insert repeaters to strengthen the signal for much cheaper than having to rip out walls.
Notably this is exactly how VDSL is being currently used. I now use one at home, 100/10 connection over a standard copper pair to DSLAM in the basement which in turn is connected to the central ISP ne
Re:Up to 250m? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Not even close. VDSL2 DSLAM is (afaik) around 1000 euro for operators who buy them in bulk nowadays, and you can hook it to the building's electric supply. You're not going to need VDSL2 to work if building has no power anyway (modems will turn off without power), so you don't need any kind of batteries.
You seem to think this is hypothetical. This is how much of the internet is being implemented across Nordics as far as I know. They pulled this connection to my apartment building a few years ago, and the ro
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Politics.
(I live in Australia)
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30 meters, bonded? yeah, that'll sell (Score:5, Funny)
as soon as you get out of the shade of the equipment cabinet, it's dead, Jim. yeah, that'll work. dig up the shrubs to put a 2 cubic meter cabinet and power stand next to the house. oh, yeah, I'm going to pester the phone company for this now.
plus 106+ MHz impacts aviation radio with interference. if the cabinet blocking your dryer vent doesn't get you, the 737 in your living room will.
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Also heavily dependent on the quality of your line, not just the length. If it is old and crappy, gets damp every time it rains and is only holding on by a thread this isn't going to help you convince the phone company to replace it for you. I don't know if the US is any better but in the UK British Telecom will just tell you it works for voice so sod off.
30m (Score:2)
That is going to barely make it from the pole to the house. Tack on how much the gear will cost and this is cheaper than pulling fiber? Pull the fiber and be done with it 2 strands of single mode from the 70's would still get me any speed available today, sure it might need C/DWDM to do it but it's doable with standard gear.
Re:30m (Score:5, Informative)
This is a good way to get high speeds into multi-tenant buildings. You bring fiber into the wire closet and then run this over the existing copper to the offices, apartments, suites throughout the building.
Re:30m (Score:4, Informative)
30m is pretty short run, 10ge will do 100m over 6a or 7. For office buildings it's normally pretty easy to get new cable in place not so much with apartment complexes.
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The other concern is, what if only 1 or 2 tenants in the 10 story office building are interested in anything higher than 50mb/s service. Why run fiber through the whole building for those two customers, when you can just upgrade your equipment in the wire closet and be done in an afternoon?
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Your 10 story office building would be out of reach of this, 3.9m is your average commercial building floor to floor distance and I've yet to see one with the primary dmarc in the middle floor :)
In the case of only 1 or 2 clients pulling only one or two pairs might be the correct thing.
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You need to think further out than the immediate if you want to make good long term decisions.
Re:30m (Score:4, Informative)
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maybe some, but they ran fiber right to my room in a 100 person apt building in NYC in about 2010.
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They run fiber to the wire closet, and the runs to the units are VDSL2.
Obligatory "me too", via Saunalahti/Elisa @ .fi for a couple of years now.
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Details like that are only important to the ISP if they actually intend to deliver the advertised speed.
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You don't even need two strands. A single strand and a BX GBIC (different wavelengths up and down over the same fibre) will see you good for 100Mbps, 1Gbps or 10Gbps depending on how much you want to spend on your optics. You can get 40km and 80km versions of all three as well.
Given the big cost in fibre is splicing and termination, halving the number of strands is going to make a big dint in the role out cost. There is a slight cost premium for BX GBIC's at the moment but I am sure if you made telco sized
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I would love to see a passive fiber network that is run by the muni that allows cdwm from central meet me rooms (aka the old telco CO). BX optics are nice, but would rather have optics with different send and receive wavelengths without the built in cdwm splitter/combiner so you can have multiple providers reusing the same fiber.
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As we have seen with the last few years of hurricane season, putting the fiber huts etc while cheaper is a logistics nightmare in an emergency. The move to put everything on a pole is simply about getting things cheaper. In a rural setting sure but not within 20 or so cable miles of the CO.
Meanwhile, in DSL-land (Score:4, Insightful)
The rest of us still do local caching proxies and QoS hackery to make the most of our 2-3 Mbps.
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This is the future of DSL land. Every year the twisted-pair based providers build more fiber extending their DSL aggregation modules closer to the customer. Eventually they will all become FTTH providers, but somewhere in-between they are high speed DSL over short copper lines that go to a DSLAM at the end of the street.
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Interestingly, we don't know if the speed is synchronous.
Perhaps the upload is .6Mbps?
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Synchronous != Symmetrical. The article does mention that the XG-FAST technology is symmetrical, although the service provided by the Telco probably would not be.
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You'd think that's some kind of manifest destiny, but where I live the telco (VZ) has already stated that the fiber rollout is over with. They population density doesn't warrant the investment of the equipment needed to extend the fiber.
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It's true a lot of FTTH early adopters didn't find the business model as attractive as they thought. But every year the price of the FTTH PON equipent comes down, and the price of ADSL and copper is going up.
It's inevitable that we will all have FTTH at some point. It's debatable whether the existing ILEC will survive long enough to build all the way to the home, but I think the healthier ones will.
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That's not the case at all. There is only 1 FTTH adopter in the area - Verizon, and they're never going anywhere. It's not a question of an attractive business model, it's a matter of basic math - they've stretched the fiber as long as it will pay for, and no further. ILECs want out of the copper business altogether, that's why they're rolling (capped) 4G "Broadband" as an alternative.
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Your ideas are intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter. No seriously, I'm with you on the 3mbps/sec DSL situation and am wondering what software/hardware you use for this. I see this as being quite handy on Patch Tuesday and similar. I have half-ideas as to how to make it work, but I'm interested to hear about your tried-and-true setup.
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Cache your DNS.
Queue and deliver your own email - throttled, of course.
Force everything through a squid proxy for a couple of reasons - first, see what your PCs are doing w/o any user interaction, I found it interesting how many google and microsoft websites things randomly hit. Block them all in squid to save bandwidth. Bandwidth throttle in squid, if you do it right you can make it subnet, IP, time-of-day specific, whatever you want. Caching Microsoft stuff can be tricky, there's a lot of articles ou
Verizon and AT&T will have it next year (Score:3)
Because you know they upgrade their networks right away
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Nah, they'll do their best to bury this tech so they can justify giving their pet video streaming services priority and throttling others in the name of fighting network congestion even though their network was largely built with public funds.
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Savings? (Score:3)
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Any opportunity for competition to cable is welcome, so I hope they can get this or similar tech to market. Sounds like they've got a way to go.
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My ISP went from 7 racks of DSL equipment in the CO plus cabinets in the field to 1/2 rack of fiber equipment with NOTHING in the field.
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Okay. Bidirectionally? (Score:3)
Or are we going to have to put up with an idiotically asynchronous connection like we already do with DSL (768K) now?
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Or are we going to have to put up with an idiotically asynchronous connection like we already do with DSL (768K) now?
You probably mean Asymmetric.
I would think consumer and small business Internet access will keep on being asymmetric for the most part, whatever the technology.
Most users on those markets are consumers and not producers of data, which means more downloads than uploads.
Combine that with bandwidth being ALWAY scarce, you will have Engineers , network architects, product managers
and management designing their products taking that into account.
The market need for a symmetrical or a reverse ratio of uploads to d
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I'm not aware of asymetric Ethernet standard, for instance. Fiber to the home is basically last mile Ethernet, and in some markets where residential ISP just sell DSL service without bothering to limit speeds (and where caps are unheard of) you are really able to get a symmetric connection. Other providers may artifically limit the connection to an asymmetrical one like 100/10, 100/30 or 100/50.
Why not use Gbps? (Score:5, Insightful)
Other than just wanting to sound super awesome is there any reason why they aren't using Gbps instead of Mbps? It's sort of like saying a new car has a top speed of a bazillion picometers per second.
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Maybe to disambiguate from 10GigE, which is a different beast altogether from 10G over unshielded telco twisted pairs.
Speed Is Useless (Score:2)
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Wait.... (Score:2)
I thought I read somewhere that it was 10,000,000 kbps, or was it 10gbps?
10,000 Mbps = 10 Gbps (Score:2)
Metric conversion for those who prefer simpler numbers.
Oh, and that's a furload of Libraries of Congress per time period.
Don't have a garden (Score:2)
Does a balcony count?
Once I would have been excited (Score:2)
Useless (Score:2)
I hate it as much as anyone but.. (Score:2)
.. there's shit tons of fiber where I live, only it's under the streets but doesn't reach premises. No incentive or obligation to hook it up to cramped four-story 19th century buildings, where most of the flats are rented.
Simply put no one will pay for doing whatever complicated digging and stuff to do in the building just so I can upgrade speed. And oh, you often have a succession of building less than five meter wide, in a one-way street.
Regular DSL speed is high. VDSL is perfectly useless : needs to be l
Not really news? (Score:2)
The 10GBASE-T IEEE 802.3an standard supports 10Gbps Ethernet up to 100 meters over shielded CAT6 or 55m over unshielded CAT6 twisted pair.
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One is CAT6, the other is a POTS wire.
One uses two pairs (4 wires), the other uses a pair (2 wires)
Terrible article. (Score:3)
The much better Ars Technica summary article [arstechnica.com] says that yes, 30m for 10Gbps, but 1Gbps over 70m. Gigabit DSL would be a game changer.
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That's actually 1250 MB/s. (Score:2)
Why we are now measuring thing in units we never use, bits, is pretty beyond me.
We use bytes, K bytes, M bytes, G bytes and T bytes.
Using bits with a lower case b is a byte / 8 and can be useless and misleading to the average viewer.
Re: That's actually 1250 MB/s. (Score:1)
Pssst the basic unit for information is actually the bit. Byte is just a shorthand for 8 bit.
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Wil that work on crappy far copper lines? (Score:2)
I can't even get fast speeds on dial-up since they connect from 24000-31200 even on 56k modems. :( Also, no DSL because COs are too far (over 20K ft.). :(
It will never deploy..... (Score:2)
This is Ethernet (Score:2)
Could swear 4 wires can carry Ethernet
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Yes it can! But only 100Mbit Ethernet. 1000Mbit (gigabit) Requires all 8 pairs. An old trick (one loathed by a lot of technicians charged with upgrading existing installations to gigabit) is to use a single cat5 cable for two 100Mbit Ethernet drops by only using 4 pairs per port.
Re: This is Ethernet (Score:1)
Two pair (4 wires) is required for 100 Mbit, Four pair (8 wires) for Gigabit.
30m! (Score:2)
wow, too bad the exchange box is a mile down the road
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Bell peppers are a very popular vegetable. I really like bell peppers. Costco has banned them however, bell peppers cannot be obtained at costco. So I shop elsewhere for my bell peppers.
Your book looks like emotional junk, I won't be purchasing it from anywhere.
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What the hell dude? What is it you want? You can read anything at all pretty much so what else do you want? Force people to read it? Crazy people like you pushing it makes people want to ignore it. You're the best and most effective censor of all.
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If you really think we should read your book please provide a torrent source. Shall we find it interesting, many people who would have skipped it will purchase it from amazon or whichever seller is left.
Else, I'm pretty sure it's worthless.
Thank you for your time :)
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A real conservative (which the fucking Bushs were NOT) doesn't grow government to oppress people. They get that shit out of the way. I don't think you're a real conservative either, just a fucking nut. Go howl at the moon some more.
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Make up your mind, are they liberals or fascists? Your rant seams like the ravings of an assylum escapee. Missed your meds again, didn't you?
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The only thing liberals seem to have in common with fascists is their belief in the primacy of the State. Other than that they have little in common. You've focused on that one similarity to the exclusion of the differences.
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If it weren't for all of this fake controversy and bogus righteous indignation, I would have no idea what this book is. Perhaps it just didn't sell well at Costco. It's a warehouse store you know. You can't depend on an item being there the next time you visit even if it was there the last time.
These Tea Baggers seem to be missing the whole "Warehouse Club" concept here.
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it's* nice
it's = it is
Learn this. This is fourth grade English.
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