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- It originates from the Evil House of Cheat
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- Essay Name : 564.txt
- Uploader : Robert Corrier
- Email Address : s1w5@unb.ca
- Language : English
- Subject : Computer
- Title : ISDN vs. Cable modems
- Grade : 92%
- School System : University of New Brunswick
- Country : Canada
- Author Comments : hard to write
- Teacher Comments : very good
- Date : august 23rd, 1996
- Site found at : a friend
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- 1.0 Introduction
-
-
- The Internet is a network of networks that interconnects computers around
- the world, supporting both business and residential users. In 1994, a
- multimedia Internet application known as the World Wide Web became
- popular. The higher bandwidth needs of this application have highlighted
- the limited Internet access speeds available to residential users. Even at 28.8
- Kilobits per second (Kbps)ùthe fastest residential access commonly
- available at the time of this writingùthe transfer of graphical images can be
- frustratingly slow.
-
- This report examines two enhancements to existing residential
- communications infrastructure: Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN),
- and cable television networks upgraded to pass bi-directional digital traffic
- (Cable Modems). It analyzes the potential of each enhancement to deliver
- Internet access to residential users. It validates the hypothesis that upgraded
- cable networks can deliver residential Internet access more cost-effectively,
- while offering a broader range of services.
-
- The research for this report consisted of case studies of two commercial
- deployments of residential Internet access, each introduced in the spring of
- 1994:
-
- ╖ Continental Cablevision and Performance Systems International (PSI)
- jointly developed PSICable, an Internet access service deployed over
- upgraded cable plant in Cambridge, Massachusetts;
-
- ╖ Internex, Inc. began selling Internet access over ISDN telephone
- circuits available from Pacific Bell. Internex's customers are residences and
- small businesses in the "Silicon Valley" area south of San Francisco,
- California.
-
- 2.0 The Internet
-
- When a home is connected to the Internet, residential communications
- infrastructure serves as the "last mile" of the connection between the
- home computer and the rest of the computers on the Internet. This
- section describes the Internet technology involved in that connection.
- This section does not discuss other aspects of Internet technology in
- detail; that is well done elsewhere. Rather, it focuses on the services
- that need to be provided for home computer users to connect to the
- Internet.
-
-
-
- 2.1
- ISDN and upgraded cable networks will each provide different functionality
- (e.g. type and speed of access) and cost profiles for Internet connections. It
- might seem simple enough to figure out which option can provide the needed
- level of service for the least cost, and declare that option "better." A key
- problem with this approach is that it is difficult to define exactly the needed
- level of service for an Internet connection. The requirements depend on
- the applications being run over the connection, but these applications are
- constantly changing. As a result, so are the costs of meeting the applications'
- requirements.
-
- Until about twenty years ago, human conversation was by far the dominant
- application running on the telephone network. The network was
- consequently optimized to provide the type and quality of service needed for
- conversation. Telephone traffic engineers measured aggregate statistical
- conversational patterns and sized telephone networks accordingly.
- Telephony's well-defined and stable service requirements are reflected in the
- "3-3-3" rule of thumb relied on by traffic engineers: the average voice call
- lasts three minutes, the user makes an average of three call attempts during
- the peak busy hour, and the call travels over a bidirectional 3 KHz channel.
-
- In contrast, data communications are far more difficult to characterize. Data
- transmissions are generated by computer applications. Not only do existing
- applications change frequently (e.g. because of software upgrades), but
- entirely new categoriesùsuch as Web browsersùcome into being quickly,
- adding different levels and patterns of load to existing networks.
- Researchers can barely measure these patterns as quickly as they are
- generated, let alone plan future network capacity based on them.
-
- The one generalization that does emerge from studies of both local and wide-
- area data traffic over the years is that computer traffic is bursty. It does not
- flow in constant streams; rather, "the level of traffic varies widely over
- almost any measurement time scale" (Fowler and Leland, 1991). Dynamic
- bandwidth allocations are therefore preferred for data traffic, since static
- allocations waste unused resources and limit the flexibility to absorb bursts
- of traffic.
-
- This requirement addresses traffic patterns, but it says nothing about the
- absolute level of load. How can we evaluate a system when we never know
- how much capacity is enough? In the personal computing industry, this
- problem is solved by defining "enough" to be "however much I can afford
- today," and relying on continuous price-performance improvements in digital
- technology to increase that level in the near future. Since both of the
- infrastructure upgrade options rely heavily on digital technology, another
- criteria for evaluation is the extent to which rapidly advancing technology
- can be immediately reflected in improved service offerings.
-
- Cable networks satisfy these evaluation criteria more effectively than
- telephone networks because:
-
- ╖ Coaxial cable is a higher quality transmission medium than twisted
- copper wire pairs of the same length. Therefore, fewer wires, and
- consequently fewer pieces of associated equipment, need to be
- installed and maintained to provide the same level of aggregate
- bandwidth to a neighborhood. The result should be cost savings and
- easier upgrades.
-
- ╖ Cable's shared bandwidth approach is more flexible at allocating any
- particular level of bandwidth among a group of subscribers. Since it
- does not need to rely as much on forecasts of which subscribers will
- sign up for the service, the cable architecture can adapt more readily
- to the actual demand that materializes.
-
- ╖ Telephony's dedication of bandwidth to individual customers limits
- the peak (i.e. burst) data rate that can be provided cost-effectively.
- In contrast, the dynamic sharing enabled by cable's bus architecture
- can, if the statistical aggregation properties of neighborhood traffic
- cooperate, give a customer access to a faster peak data rate than the
- expected average data rate.
-
-
- 2.2 Why focus on Internet access?
- Internet access has several desirable properties as an application to
- consider for exercising residential infrastructure. Internet technology is
- based on a peer-to-peer model of communications. Internet usage
- encompasses a wide mix of applications, including low- and high-
- bandwidth as well as asynchronous and real-time communications.
- Different Internet applications may create varying degrees of
- symmetrical (both to and from the home) and asymmetrical traffic
- flows. Supporting all of these properties poses a challenge for existing
- residential communications infrastructures.
-
- Internet access differs from the future services modeled by other studies
- described below in that it is a real application today, with growing
- demand. Aside from creating pragmatic interest in the topic, this factor
- also makes it possible to perform case studies of real deployments.
-
- Finally, the Internet's organization as an "Open Data Network" (in the
- language of (Computer Science and Telecommunications Board of the
- National Research Council, 1994)) makes it a service worthy of study
- from a policy perspective. The Internet culture's expectation of
- interconnection and cooperation among competing organizations may
- clash with the monopoly-oriented cultures of traditional infrastructure
- organizations, exposing policy issues. In addition, the Internet's status
- as a public data network may make Internet access a service worth
- encouraging for the public good. Therefore, analysis of costs to provide
- this service may provide useful input to future policy debates.
-
- 3.0 Technologies
- This chapter reviews the present state and technical evolution of
- residential cable network infrastructure. It then discusses a topic not
- covered much in the literature, namely, how this infrastructure can be
- used to provide Internet access. It concludes with a qualitative
- evaluation of the advantages and disadvantages of cable-based Internet
- access. While ISDN is extensively described in the literature, its use as
- an Internet access medium is less well-documented. This chapter
- briefly reviews local telephone network technology, including ISDN
- and future evolutionary technologies. It concludes with a qualitative
- evaluation of the advantages and disadvantages of ISDN-based Internet
- access.
-
- 3.1 Cable Technology
- Residential cable TV networks follow the tree and branch architecture.
- In each community, a head end is installed to receive satellite and
- traditional over-the-air broadcast television signals. These signals are
- then carried to subscriber's homes over coaxial cable that runs from the
- head end throughout the community
-
-
- Figure 3.1: Coaxial cable tree-and-branch topology
-
- To achieve geographical coverage of the community, the cables
- emanating from the head end are split (or "branched") into multiple
- cables. When the cable is physically split, a portion of the signal power
- is split off to send down the branch. The signal content, however, is not
- split: the same set of TV channels reach every subscriber in the
- community. The network thus follows a logical bus architecture. With
- this architecture, all channels reach every subscriber all the time,
- whether or not the subscriber's TV is on. Just as an ordinary television
- includes a tuner to select the over-the-air channel the viewer wishes to
- watch, the subscriber's cable equipment includes a tuner to select
- among all the channels received over the cable.
-
-
-
- 3.1.1. Technological evolution
- The development of fiber-optic transmission technology has led cable
- network developers to shift from the purely coaxial tree-and-branch
- architecture to an approach referred to as Hybrid Fiber and Coax(HFC)
- networks. Transmission over fiber-optic cable has two main advantages
- over coaxial cable:
-
- ╖ A wider range of frequencies can be sent over the fiber, increasing
- the bandwidth available for transmission;
-
- ╖ Signals can be transmitted greater distances without amplification.
-
- The main disadvantage of fiber is that the optical components required
- to send and receive data over it are expensive. Because lasers are still
- too expensive to deploy to each subscriber, network developers have
- adopted an intermediate Fiber to the Neighborhood (FTTN)approach.
-
- Figure 3.3: Fiber to the Neighborhood (FTTN) architecture
-
-
-
- Various locations along the existing cable are selected as sites for
- neighborhood nodes. One or more fiber-optic cables are then run from
- the head end to each neighborhood node. At the head end, the signal is
- converted from electrical to optical form and transmitted via laser over
- the fiber. At the neighborhood node, the signal is received via laser,
- converted back from optical to electronic form, and transmitted to the
- subscriber over the neighborhood's coaxial tree and branch network.
-
- FTTN has proved to be an appealing architecture for telephone
- companies as well as cable operators. Not only Continental
- Cablevision and Time Warner, but also Pacific Bell and Southern New
- England Telephone have announced plans to build FTTN networks.
- Fiber to the neighborhood is one stage in a longer-range evolution of
- the cable plant. These longer-term changes are not necessary to provide
- Internet service today, but they might affect aspects of how Internet
- service is provided in the future.
-
- 3.2 ISDN Technology
- Unlike cable TV networks, which were built to provide only local
- redistribution of television programming, telephone networks provide
- switched, global connectivity: any telephone subscriber can call any
- other telephone subscriber anywhere else in the world. A call placed
- from a home travels first to the closest telephone company Central
- Office (CO) switch. The CO switch routes the call to the destination
- subscriber, who may be served by the same CO switch, another CO
- switch in the same local area, or a CO switch reached through a long-
- distance network.
-
-
-
- Figure 4.1: The telephone network
-
- The portion of the telephone network that connects the subscriber to
- the closest CO switch is referred to as the local loop. Since all calls
- enter and exit the network via the local loop, the nature of the local
- connection directly affects the type of service a user gets from the
- global telephone network.
-
- With a separate pair of wires to serve each subscriber, the local
- telephone network follows a logical star architecture. Since a Central
- Office typically serves thousands of subscribers, it would be unwieldy
- to string wires individually to each home. Instead, the wire pairs are
- aggregated into groups, the largest of which are feeder cables. At
- intervals along the feeder portion of the loop, junction boxes are placed.
- In a junction box, wire pairs from feeder cables are spliced to wire pairs
- in distribution cables that run into neighborhoods. At each subscriber
- location, a drop wire pair (or pairs, if the subscriber has more than one
- line) is spliced into the distribution cable.
-
-
-
- Since distribution cables are either buried or aerial, they are disruptive
- and expensive to change. Consequently, a distribution cable usually
- contains as many wire pairs as a neighborhood might ever need, in
- advance of actual demand.
-
- Implementation of ISDN is hampered by the irregularity of the local
- loop plant. Referring back to Figure 4.3, it is apparent that loops are of
- different lengths, depending on the subscriber's distance from the
- Central Office. ISDN cannot be provided over loops with loading coils
- or loops longer than 18,000 feet (5.5 km).
-
-
-
- 4.0 Internet Access
-
-
- This section will outline the contrasts of access via the cable plant with
- respect to access via the local telephon network.
-
-
- 4.1 Internet Access Via Cable
- The key question in providing residential Internet access is what kind of
- network technology to use to connect the customer to the Internet For
- residential Internet delivered over the cable plant, the answer is
- broadband LAN technology. This technology allows transmission of
- digital data over one or more of the 6 MHz channels of a CATV cable.
- Since video and audio signals can also be transmitted over other
- channels of the same cable, broadband LAN technology can co-exist
- with currently existing services.
-
- Bandwidth
- The speed of a cable LAN is described by the bit rate of the modems
- used to send data over it. As this technology improves, cable LAN
- speeds may change, but at the time of this writing, cable modems range
- in speed from 500 Kbps to 10 Mbps, or roughly 17 to 340 times the bit
- rate of the familiar 28.8 Kbps telephone modem. This speed represents
- the peak rate at which a subscriber can send and receive data, during
- the periods of time when the medium is allocated to that subscriber. It
- does not imply that every subscriber can transfer data at that rate
- simultaneously. The effective average bandwidth seen by each
- subscriber depends on how busy the LAN is. Therefore, a cable LAN
- will appear to provide a variable bandwidth connection to the Internet
-
- Full-time connections
- Cable LAN bandwidth is allocated dynamically to a subscriber only
- when he has traffic to send. When he is not transferring traffic, he does
- not consume transmission resources. Consequently, he can always be
- connected to the Internet Point of Presence without requiring an
- expensive dedication of transmission resources.
-
-
-
-
-
- 4.2 Internet Access Via Telephone Company
-
- In contrast to the shared-bus architecture of a cable LAN, the telephone
- network requires the residential Internet provider to maintain multiple
- connection ports in order to serve multiple customers simultaneously.
- Thus, the residential Internet provider faces problems of multiplexing
- and concentration of individual subscriber lines very similar to those
- faced in telephone Central Offices.
-
- The point-to-point telephone network gives the residential Internet
- provider an architecture to work with that is fundamentally different
- from the cable plant. Instead of multiplexing the use of LAN
- transmission bandwidth as it is needed, subscribers multiplex the use of
- dedicated connections to the Internet provider over much longer time
- intervals. As with ordinary phone calls, subscribers are allocated fixed
- amounts of bandwidth for the duration of the connection. Each
- subscriber that succeeds in becoming active (i.e. getting connected to
- the residential Internet provider instead of getting a busy signal) is
- guaranteed a particular level of bandwidth until hanging up the call.
-
- Bandwidth
- Although the predictability of this connection-oriented approach is
- appealing, its major disadvantage is the limited level of bandwidth that
- can be economically dedicated to each customer. At most, an ISDN
- line can deliver 144 Kbps to a subscriber, roughly four times the
- bandwidth available with POTS. This rate is both the average and the
- peak data rate. A subscriber needing to burst data quickly, for example
- to transfer a large file or engage in a video conference, may prefer a
- shared-bandwidth architecture, such as a cable LAN, that allows a
- higher peak data rate for each individual subscriber. A subscriber who
- needs a full-time connection requires a dedicated port on a terminal
- server. This is an expensive waste of resources when the subscriber is
- connected but not transferring data.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 5.0 Cost
-
- Cable-based Internet access can provide the same average bandwidth
- and higher peak bandwidth more economically than ISDN. For
- example, 500 Kbps Internet access over cable can provide the same
- average bandwidth and four times the peak bandwidth of ISDN access
- for less than half the cost per subscriber. In the technology reference
- model of the case study, the 4 Mbps cable service is targeted at
- organizations. According to recent benchmarks, the 4 Mbps cable
- service can provide the same average bandwidth and thirty-two times
- the peak bandwidth of ISDN for only 20% more cost per subscriber.
- When this reference model is altered to target 4 Mbps service to
- individuals instead of organizations, 4 Mbps cable access costs 40%
- less per subscriber than ISDN. The economy of the cable-based
- approach is most evident when comparing the per-subscriber cost per
- bit of peak bandwidth: $0.30 for Individual 4 Mbps, $0.60 for
- Organizational 4 Mbps, and $2 for the 500 Kbps cable servicesùversus
- close to $16 for ISDN. However, the potential penetration of cable-
- based access is constrained in many cases (especially for the 500 Kbps
- service) by limited upstream channel bandwidth. While the penetration
- limits are quite sensitive to several of the input parameter assumptions,
- the cost per subscriber is surprisingly less so.
-
- Because the models break down the costs of each approach into their
- separate components, they also provide insight into the match between
- what follows naturally from the technology and how existing business
- entities are organized. For example, the models show that subscriber
- equipment is the most significant component of average cost. When
- subscribers are willing to pay for their own equipment, the access
- provider's capital costs are low. This business model has been
- successfully adopted by Internex, but it is foreign to the cable industry.
- As the concluding chapter discusses, the resulting closed market
- structure for cable subscriber equipment has not been as effective as the
- open market for ISDN equipment at fostering the development of
- needed technology. In addition, commercial development of both cable
- and ISDN Internet access has been hindered by monopoly control of
- the needed infrastructureùwhether manifest as high ISDN tariffs or
- simple lack of interest from cable operators.
-
-
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-