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Network The Internet

One Step Closer To Getting 10 Gigabit At Home 71

An anonymous reader quotes a report from ZDNet: Now, thanks to Comcast and Broadcom, we're seeing the first tests of full-duplex (FDX) DOCSIS 4 system-on-chip (SoC) devices. Comcast's tests, done between Philadelphia and Denver, show that FDX can work with DOCSIS 4. FDX enables cable internet providers to run a high-speed internet connection both upstream and downstream simultaneously. In other words, while you won't see symmetric speeds, you will someday see 10 Gbps downstream and 6 Gbps upstream over Comcast's hybrid-fiber coaxial (HFC) network. Comcast has been working towards this for years. The company has been working to bring DOCSIS 4 FDX to market pretty much since CableLabs' set the specification in 2017.

There is another way to deliver DOCSIS 4 speeds: Extended Spectrum DOCSIS (ESD). This is easier to deploy since it "only" raises to 1.8Gbps while keeping downstream and upstream traffic separate as has been the case with previous DOCSIS versions. Comcast, though, is investing heavily in chasing the top price of 10Gbps. It's possible that a single chipset could support both FDX and ESD, but we're still years away from that silicon being forged. [...] In the tests, which use experimental Broadcom SoCs, in a simulated network environment, they hit speeds of over 4Gbps both up and downstream simultaneously. This was done using DOCSIS 4's echo cancellation and overlapping spectrum techniques. The businesses expect future optimization to push the throughput even faster. We still don't know when these speeds will arrive in our small offices/home offices (SOHO). CableLabs doesn't even expect to test hardware for DOCSIS 4 certification until 2022. Nor, has Comcast announced any kind of deployment roadmap.
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One Step Closer To Getting 10 Gigabit At Home

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  • 6 Gps up? That's a lot of telemetry. Somehow I think Microsoft and Google would choke on that much.

  • by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Friday April 23, 2021 @08:25PM (#61307162) Homepage Journal

    Awesome! Now we can use up our 1.2 TB data cap in only 16 minutes! Thanks, Comcast! That's Comcastic!

    • Now we can use up our 1.2 TB data cap in only 16 minutes!

      With Municipal Fiber gaining traction around the country, it may not be much longer until fiber to the home starts becoming the norm rather than the exception. The fiber was just run to my house, and the final installation is on the docket in a month (longer than I thought).

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Don't complain thanks to the Australia government I can expect to get that speed on my HFC network sometime in the next five decades ago (oh wait I am sixty and be dead before whom ever is living in my exhome gets that speed), top job, Australia and only fifty billion dollars spent on a network they can not sell because it is CRAP but really really profitable for the corrupt mates of the corrupt Liberal Party, who got to do the entire build out at maintenance rates, 50% profit rather than 5% on tender, ohh

      • You have HFC? Luxury.

        My top floor flat still has ADSL, with a fibre to the curb FTTC rollout later in the year - Uncle Scotty from marketing can't be bothered rewiring the building.

        Instead of that shit, I'm just tethering to a 4G phone, streaming content in 640Ã--360 and hoping 5G rollout will include more data someday.

  • by Rick Zeman ( 15628 ) on Friday April 23, 2021 @08:34PM (#61307186)

    Right now, I have Comcast's 400/10 Mbps plan so that's a 40:1 asymmetry ratio. They keep trying to sell me faster and faster downlinks and I don't care about that; it's fast enough. I care about an increased uplink because a 1.25 mb/s upload speed sucks rocks. I particularly laugh at them when they mention "cloud" or "video."

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I wish you could choose how they divide the up and downstream channels. Like you I'd gladly trade some download speed for a decent upload rate.

      All this hybrid crap is just trying to wring a bit more profit out of an old network. We just need fibre everywhere. Japan has fibre and the baseline speed in major cities is 10,000/10,000 symmetrical. Most PCs don't have a 10G port and neither do consumer routers. In fact just finding a consumer grade route that can hit 1Gbps is no simple task. It's great because yo

    • I care about an increased uplink because a 1.25 mb/s upload speed sucks rocks. I particularly laugh at them when they mention "cloud" or "video."

      I see that in other parts of the world too, and let's face it that is largely driven by consumer demand. Downloads are on demand, uploads however are largely background activities. If a movie is buffering or the user is twiddling their thumbs waiting for another 50GB game patch to come down it affects them directly. If on the other hand they just saved a movie, then background cloud synchronisation will do its thing while they move on with their lives. Same with social media, when you start the upload there

    • It is slightly hilarious when LTE gives me more that 50% of the upload speed of Comcast, but only slightly.

    • by stikves ( 127823 )

      Is *is* asymmetric, but for a reason.

      As much as it is painful to admit, the Internet is no longer a democratic peer-to-peer network. Now when you access the DNS servers, look up a website, download a system update, it no longer goes to "the Internet", but rather is served from a CDN cache in your ISP's datacenters. Even non-static pages will be served from "edge cloud", which is a fancy term for colocation (again in the same ISP datacenter).

      So there is no more "symmetry", since your "upload" speed is limite

  • Comcast et. al. will never make the investment to make this a commercial product, unless they can charge astronomical rates for it. They've got a stranglehold on their subscribers, so you'll never actually see these kinds of speeds for a reasonable price.

  • New fiber from Build Back Better is going to create competition. Comcast _finally_ improving obsolete technology after years of doing little is not going to cut it.
    • by kriston ( 7886 )

      I have FiOS and it's always shared with the neighbors. You don't notice any difference in speeds at any time even at the end of a dead-end street.

      • by rapjr ( 732628 )
        I was asking about the new DOCSIS protocol, which will not create as much bandwidth as fiber, and hence if the bandwidth is shared, as it currently is on cable internet, those high speeds in the article might be neighborhood speeds, not the speeds individuals will see. Hence it would be poor competition for fiber.
  • Can I get Home at 10Gb/s?

    It'll take until the heat-death of the universe to beam back to Sirius 2b at that speed.

  • I trust Comcast about as far as I can throw a cheesecake underwater.

    More interesting to me is when 10G home networking gear will finally become affordable. While individual 10G-capable NICs are finally within reach, 10G switches are still annoyingly pricey. The cheapest 10G switch I'm aware of is a little 5-port unit from MikroTik [mikrotik.com], and it's USD$150.00. And that's before you buy the SFP+ modules (many of which have a nasty habit of being vendor-locked).

    • I think the main advantage is that you can have many devices all using up to 10 Gb in total. 1 Gb bidirectional will fit most home users use cases, but 10 Gb allows multiple devices to use their full bandwidth all at the same time. There are some use cases for 10 Gb on a single device, but by the time those really come along and get popular, the hardware will get cheaper.

    • by Megane ( 129182 )
      That's why I can't give a fuck about more than 1G to the home, which I'm still waiting for, even being in a Google Fiber city. (I actually live in an adjacent city limits, but I haven't heard a single word of news about GF here in over two years.) It would literally do me no good to have 10G unless I was pulling gigabit streams on multiple computers, which I don't, even over my LAN. I haven't even AT&T "Fiber" offer more than 100M in my neighborhood, so I'm sticking with my ~30Mbit Uverse for now. The c
    • by Agripa ( 139780 )

      I have been considering > 1G since that MikroTik router became available. As long as the distance requirements are not great, passive SFP+ cables are the least expensive option.

  • ...but 10G to the home is already a mainstream service in developed nations.

  • If there were a good market reason to do it, the providers that are already running fibre to the home would be offering something above 1Gbps. They aren't. Verizon Fios is probably the largest fibre provider in the US, and they max out at 1Gb/s.

    The issue here for them isn't the bandwidth of the connections from the home to their datacenters. It's the networking equipment. A 1Gb/s switch port is dirt cheap, and has been for a long time. It's also standard on desktop computers and WiFi routers. It's sti

  • Comcast

    This means advertised 10Gbps down / 6Gbps up will be more like 2.5Gbps down / 1.5Gbps up. Off-peak. In areas with brand-new infrastructure. Five or maybe six days of the week. Suspiciously, the only sites that will actually connect at these speeds are well-known speed testing sites and maybe Netflix and/or Youtube.

    It will also only be available for people who are willing to "triple-bundle" TV and land phone, for $200/month (special introductory rate). The routers will be absolutely godawful. I'd sa

    • by drwho ( 4190 )

      Yeah, you've got it. "Designed in Philly With Love"..beta testing on customers, pushing out nightly builds. Ah damn yeah why did my cablemodem suddenly have to reboot at 2:30am and take me off line in the middle of an important meeting? For the 3rd time in a week? Agile, they call it.

      If you go for a pure fibre ISP, w/o the TV package, stuff just works. But that's not even available for a lot of people, because Comcast is a monopoly power. Meanwhile, in Sauron Robert's lair in Center City...

  • with an 1.5 TB cap!

  • The question says it all. What do you expect to be doing at 10Gbps that you can't do right now well enough?

    I'd rather spend my money on other things tbh.

    • It's not for you, human. It's for Skynet.

    • by Agripa ( 139780 )

      As others pointed out, it is the increase in upload speed which would make the most difference. As it is now, I do not even consider cloud based backup services; they are completely useless.

  • it's not (directly) aimed at single user speed. The idea is mostly to squeeze more out of already existing segments without having to invest into making your segments smaller.
    So this will essentially mean just less congestion on the last mile, not 10 Gigabit for the end user. Those 10 Gigabits are shared between hundreds if not thousands of users, depending on how large the segments are.

  • by BadDreamer ( 196188 ) on Saturday April 24, 2021 @04:05AM (#61307978) Homepage

    10 Gbit is already deployed in parts of Europe. It's expensive, â50 per month. But that's the price to stay at the cutting edge.

    Of course, getting a home network that will actually manage to make use of that bandwidth is another issue. But that's getting solved as well.

    https://www.bahnhof.se/akalla/... [bahnhof.se]

  • While Comcast, innovative and customer centric company they are, talk about this telcos are building out faster wireless networks. One advantage I see for wireless is the ability to reach customers at a much lower cost as no last mile cabling is needed. While there certainly are bandwidth and backhaul issues, in theory by adding devices you can increase a customer's capacity on demand only when needed. A receiver could be designed with multiple SIMs embedded to do the switching without end user action. A

  • yes, I know, they've got a lot invested in their metallic infrastructure. But Fiber is the way to go. In rural areas, DSL and Cable are horrible and expensive if available at all, but upstart all-fiber ISPs are lighting up the small towns and countryside at an alarming rate, providing reliable service for far less than Comcast (under $50 for 100 mbps). Of course, Starlink is the true competition in such places. Comcast and Verizon aren't really viable.

  • I don't need 10Gb. What I need is for wifi to work correctly at its advertised bandwidth. Even if the bandwidth is only 500Mbps.

  • .. I can already get 10 gigabit service from my local ISP, USI Fiber

    Instead of using shared medium technologies like GPON or PON they run an actual fiber strand from their central offices to each customer. Upgrading to 10GE is just a matter of swapping SFP's

    Highly recommend if you're in Minneapolis. http://www.usifiber.com/ [usifiber.com]

  • Will they still have a monthly cap at 250gb of data?
  • We are currently served by 4G or Fixed wireless, mostly around 3 to 5Mbps. Fortunately our electric utility is a coop and is actually building out fiber to the home. They have completed several areas and ours was next to be installed, THIS YEAR! True Gb speeds for $100 a month is AWESOME and I've been signed up for a couple years already.

    This makes sense given they can't make a profit on it and they already have poles and rights of way all the way to every home. Should be straight up simple.

    BUT NO!

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