From KillerApp.Com
New Redback Router Will Enable “Megabit Mobility”
By Masha Zager
Jun 3, 2007, 20:12
Within a few years, video could be as portable as voice is today. Several pieces are needed to complete the puzzle - and one of them was just announced by Redback Networks.
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Imagine starting a videoconference from a computer in your
office, continuing to participate from your cell phone as you travel across
town, and finishing the meeting on another computer when you arrive at a second
location – all without having to log out and back in again.
Or, what if you could watch your cable TV channels from any screen,
anywhere – TV, desktop PC, laptop or cell phone – without having to buy and
install a special device to shuttle the data around? Or download a
movie to your home computer and then watch that movie on any
screen, anywhere? Suddenly, the “quadruple play” of voice/video/data/wireless
would mean a lot more than just the convenience of paying for four services on
a single bill.
Bandwidth Increases Are on the Way
These scenarios may be only two to three years away for U.S. customers.
Many wireless carriers are already preparing to implement the next generation
of high-speed data services. HSPA (high-speed packet access) with up to 14.4
Mbps will be available on some mobile phones by the end of the year. Sprint
expects to begin its mobile WiMAX rollout by year-end, too. The Long-Term Evolution
(LTE) initiative envisions data speeds as high as 200 or 300 Mbps for mobile
wireless devices in the not-too-distant future; communications vendor Ericsson has
already demonstrated speeds of 144 Mbps.
At the same time, wireline speeds are also increasing. Verizon
and a host of smaller carriers are rolling out fiber-to-the-home networks,
AT&T is ramping up its U-Verse service delivered over fiber-to-the-node,
and cable companies are getting ready to upgrade to DOCSIS 3.0.
The increasing capacity of both wired and wireless broadband
means that consumers and businesses will soon have access from anywhere to
high-definition video – not just for linear TV but for video on demand,
videoconferencing and other new video services.
The Goal: Seamless Mobility for Video Services
Redback Networks, a network equipment company that was
bought by Ericsson earlier this year, has been tracking this bandwidth growth
and trying to anticipate how carriers and their customers will want to use the
new network capacity. Since the company makes edge routers for many of the major
communications carriers worldwide (an edge router aggregates and controls traffic
at the edge of the access network), it has a lot riding on its guesses about
the broadband future.
Redback’s conclusion:
Customers have grown used to making phone calls from anywhere, to anywhere.
They are used to making calls while in transit, and they're used to having their
calls continue uninterrupted as they pass through different providers’ service
territories. Once these customers have mobile video services, they will want
those services to work the same way. They will expect digital roaming for video
just as they do for voice – and, by the way, they’ll expect “five nines” (99.999
percent) reliability for video, too. Customers will want to be permanently and
seamlessly connected.
Some more of Redback’s conclusions: Everyone is moving
toward all-IP services – even mobile phone providers. But many different access
methods (HSPA, CDMA, WiMAX, GPON, GePON, xDSL, etc.) will continue to coexist,
and wireless devices will increasingly be built to use multiple access methods.
Two Billion Broadband Video Customers
Redback’s
new edge router, the SmartEdge 1200, which was announced today, incorporates
all of these ideas and will support "megabit mobility" whenever carriers are ready to offer it. In addition to doubling carrier capacity for new video upgrades,
the router extends triple-play services to mobile networks. Because Redback
believes that multiple broadband access methods will continue to exist, the
router is access-neutral. It will be able to maintain user sessions across
different devices, different locations, different access networks, and even
different carriers.
The
potential market for the router is very large – maybe ten times the size of the
market defined by today’s broadband video. Arpit Joshipura, vice president of
product management for Redback, says, “Over time, we believe more than 2
billion wireless and wireline users will be upgraded to videocentric broadband
networks, from 250 million broadband users today.”
If
Redback's guess is right, it could be helping to launch a major shift in the way
consumers and businesses use video.
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