The following text is copyright 1998 by
Network World, permission is hearby given for reproduction, as long as
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Is there hope for DSL?
By Scott Bradner
A feature of being a
columnist in a technical publication is that I am presented with a surfeit of
opportunities to speak to marketing droids from companies which, according to
the spiel, have the answer to questions I did not know I had. (A disclosure - I
do try to arrange some of the visits for lunch time so I can at least get a
free meal out of the encounter.) From time to time one of these encounters
results in useful information. One of those occasions came last week when Rick
Gilbert of Copper Mountain came by (unfortunately the only time that worked was
early morning so no free lunch.)
I've been hearing horror
stories for the last few years about the problems encountered when ISPs and
other companies attempt to deploy various types of digital subscriber line
(DSL) links to their customers. Particular problems mentioned have included the
difficulty in getting wires from the phone company which are clean enough to
provide good performance, potentially severe crosstalk which results from
having more than one DSL link in the same cable bundle running down the street,
and significant distance limitations.
Of course the most
severe challenge to the future of DSL is the fact that in general it is a
telephone company technology, empowered by the aggressive innovative
environment common in telephone companies (NOT!). DSL is seen by them to be a
way to provide mixed voice and data service over the same line so the version
of DSL they are working on uses ATM to multiplex the services and is tightly
tied to the voice world. In addition, the same people in the telephone
companies who brought you ISDN are involved in bringing you DSL, a potentially
fatal burden if there ever was one.
There seem to be dozens
of types of DSL and not all of them have the same set of issues. IDSL and SDSL,
the types of DSL that Copper Mountain and a number of other companies are using
uses the same on the wire technology (2B1Q) as ISDN does which, among other
things, means that the crosstalk problems that plague some types of DSL are not
a significant issue. The ability to run at a reasonable speed (128 Kbps) over
22,000 ft of wire (faster for shorter cable runs) means far better coverage
than DSL versions which have shorter limits. Over 99% of all customers are
within 22,000 ft of a phone central office, this drops to less than 50% for
12,000 ft.
But the thing that seems
most promising about the Copper Mountain approach is that they see this as a
data service not some mixed media service. They are dealing with ISPs, not
telephone companies, and use frame-based transport rather than ATM. Frame-based
is cheaper and less complex to deal with than ATM.
DSL deployment is still
very small, far less than cable modems for example, but developments like this
and perhaps the "DSL-lite" under development by Microsoft and others,
may mean that DSL will have a better future than it has a present.
disclaimer: Harvard has
a long past of dealing with the future but has no opinion on DSL technology.