Broadband Optical Access Networks and Fiber-to-the-Home
Systems Technologies and Deployment Strategies
1. Auflage Juni 2006
334 Seiten, Hardcover
Praktikerbuch
Kurzbeschreibung
Timely and much-needed, Broadband Optical Access Networks and Fiber-to-the-Home provides a thorough overview of the topic by experts from a variety of institutions The book provides an up-to-date comprehensive overview of the topic of FTTH and Broadband Optical Access technologies, network applications, services, and deployment trends. Broadband Optical Access Networks and Fiber-to-the-Home serves as a key must-read book for a large number of readers in a wide range of industries, including telecom, datacom, broadband access network operators, and broadband multimedia service providers. It also strikes a balance between the key emerging system technologies and considerations for broadband access network and services strategies.
Broadband Optical Access and Fiber-to-the-Home (FTTH) will provide the ultimate broadband service capabilities.
Compared with the currently well-deployed broadband access technologies of ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line) and Cable Modems, optical broadband access with Fiber-to-the-User's home will cater for much higher speed access for new services.
Broadband Optical Access Networks and Fiber-to-the-Home presents a comprehensive technical overview of key technologies and deployment strategies for optical broadband access networks and emerging new broadband services. The authors discuss network design considerations, new services, deployment trends and operational experiences, while explaining the current situation and providing insights into future broadband access technologies and services.
Broadband Optical Access Networks and Fiber-to-the-Home:
* Offers a comprehensive, up-to-date introduction to new developments in broadband access network technologies and services.
* Examines the impact of research and development in photonics technologies on broadband access and FTTH.
* Covers ADSL, VDSL with FTTC (Fiber-to-the-Curb), Cable Modem over HFC (Hybrid-Fiber Coax) and Gigabit Ethernet.
* Discusses the roles of Broadband Wireless LAN and integrated FTTH/Wireless Broadband Access as well as Broadband Home Networks.
* Provides a global view of broadband network development, presenting different technical and system deployment approaches and strategic considerations for comparison.
* Gives insight into the worldwide broadband competition and the future of this technology.
Broadband Optical Access Networks and Fiber-to-the-Home will be an invaluable resource for engineers in research and development, network planners, business managers, consultants as well as analysts and educators for a better understanding of the future of broadband in the field of telecommunications, data communications, and broadband multimedia service industries.
Preface and Overview.
Acronyms.
Contributors List.
1 Broadband Optical Access Technologies and FTTH Deployment in NTT.
2 Today's Broadband Fiber Access Technologies and Deployment.Considerations at SBC.
3 FTTH: The Swedish Perspective.
4 Broadband Access Networks and Services in Korea.
5 Broadband Fiber-to-the-Home Technologies, Strategies, and Deployment Plan in Open Service Provider Networks: Project UTOPIA.
6 High-Speed FTTH Technologies in an Open Access Platform - the European MUSE Project.
7 Residential Broadband PON (B-PON) Systems.
8 Optical Networks for the Broadband Future.
9 An Evolutionary Fibre-to-the-Home Network and System Technologies: Migration from HFC to FTTH Networks.
10 FTTH Systems, Strategies, and Deployment Plans in China.
11 Integrated Broadband Optical Fibre/Wireless LAN Access Networks.
12 Broadband Optical Access, FTTH, and Home Networks - the Broadband Future.
Index.
Chinlon Lin received his Ph.D. from the Univ. of California, Berkeley. He joined AT&T Bell Labs' Laser Sciences Research Department, Communication Sciences Research Division, researchin nonlinear optics in fibers, self-phase-modulation, tunable infrared fiber Raman lasers, fiber Raman amplifiers and four-wave-mixing for optical-frequency-conversion, as well as high-speed semiconductor laser dynamic modulation studies and high-bit-rate fiber transmission system technologies. In 1984 he was on leave from Bell Labs as a Visiting Guest Professor at the Tech. Univ. of Denmark's Center for Broadband Communications (now COM Center).
He joined Bellcore in 1986 where he was Director of Broadband Lightwave systems Research. He led a group working on FTTH, FTTC, HFC architectures, DWDM tunable filters and EDFAs for high-capacity digital and analog video systems, dispersion compensation for high-speed DWDM systems, an experimental Bellcore Research Network, lightwave systems for multi-channel hybrid AM/QAM-digital video distribution for HFC networks, and Hybrid DWDM systems. He also provided technical consultation to Ameritech, Bell Atlantic, BellSouth and SBC Comm. on issues related to EDFA, DWDM and OC-192 systems, and analog/digital lightwave video distribution systems for FTTH/FTTC/HFC networks. He joined Tyco Submarine Sys. R & D Labs (formerly AT&T Submarine Systems) in September 1997, to work on lightwave technologies for DWDM systems in advanced next-generation global long-haul undersea fiber networks.
In May 2000 he founded Jedai Broadband Networks, a startup to work on Fiber-to-the Business high-speed access solutions for cable TV industry. He was Chairman, President and CTO. In 2002 he co-founded BeLight, a startup on GbE based optical wireless system and broadband FTTH optical access. He joined CUHK as Professor of Photonics and Director of IOSAT (Institute of Optical Science and Technology) in January 2003.