NBN could deliver 10 Gbps in five years

 

German 26 Tbps demonstration a case for fibre, says NBN Co CTO.

Australians connected to the National Broadband Network could receive peak speeds of up to 10 Gbps within five years through upgrades to the gigabit passive optical network (GPON) network, according to NBN Co.

Gary McLaren, chief technology officer at the government-owned network builder said that new wave division multiplexing (WDM) technology would increase the network's GPON capacity from 2.5 Gbps available today to 40 Gbps.

Users could feasibly receive peak speeds of 10 Gbps – 100 times those promised today – depending on the load on their shared 32-premise GPON link, he said.

McLaren said NBN Co subject matter experts were working with equipment vendors to keep Australia’s fibre network on the cutting edge.

“The fibre that we’re putting into the network now will be around for the next 50 years,” he said, explaining that upgrades would take place at fibre access nodes and end-user termination points.

“When we see the roadmap for the next five years, there’s a clear pathway for an increase in speed of 16 times.”

NBN Co this week welcomed news of a new, all-optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) technique that allowed German researchers to send data at a record 26 Tbps over fibre.

While McLaren did not expect the technique to enter the commercial sphere for some time, he told iTnews the demonstration “confirms what might be possible down the track”.

“We’re always keen to understand where some of the research is going,” he said, noting that commercial 26 Tbps chipsets were still “many, many years off”.

“As fibre optic technology improves, so too will speeds and the amount of data that can be carried over the network we are building today.”

“Tests such as this just go to show just why a fibre-enabled National Broadband Network is the best infrastructure for Australia’s future.”

Last year, Communications Minister Stephen Conroy announced that the NBN could deliver end users 1 Gbps in tests – ten times faster than today’s 100 Mbps speeds.

McLaren said any new fibre technology advancements would be applied to the network’s backbone and backhaul links first before reaching consumers.

Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.


NBN could deliver 10 Gbps in five years
"...or perhaps people might have actually one than one internet connected device in their home? We have some 8 internet connected devices in our house, and up to 4 people using them one time. ..."
By Ace
 
 
 
Comments: 9
wathend
May 26, 2011 2:14 PM
Only problem will be that NBN Co will have to radically change their pricing mechanism for retailers on the network. The current system, which is flawed anyway, is based on bandwidth and seriously limits the growth of bandwidth for consumers.
dingo-power
May 26, 2011 4:21 PM
I agree, this whole NBN wank will never deliver the national value that Conroy says it will. Bandwith at any price is not the way to build the nation!
deepthroat
May 26, 2011 8:19 PM
dingo - spot on. NBN really is an exercise in political pud-pulling.

The only fans are the firms that are making a killing in the build (thanks). And the geeks that think that they can down-load their life.
HubertCumberdale
May 26, 2011 9:21 PM
dingo-power wrote:
Bandwith at any price is not the way to build the nation!

But building the NBN is how you build a nation. Bring on the fibre!
deepthroat
May 27, 2011 9:30 AM
Hi hoobie - have you voted yet?
nsbgerard
May 27, 2011 11:29 AM
This is all great, except for the fact that most peoples routers wont be able to process more than ~100Mb/s of data, and their hard drives are definitely not going to be able to cache and write anywhere near 1Gb/s or more..

Edited by nsbgerard: 27/5/2011 11:31:17 AM
realitybites
May 27, 2011 12:29 PM
@nsbgerard - Yes that's right... for now. Once the infrastructure is in place I expect these things will evolve as and when demand requires it.

Whether you agree with the NBN or not (I don't really care) once it's in place, the capacity and potential will be there as and when consumers/business requires it.
HubertCumberdale
May 27, 2011 12:31 PM
nsbgerard wrote:
This is all great, except for the fact that most peoples routers wont be able to process more than ~100Mb/s of data

Solution: new and improved routers. This is not rocket science.

nsbgerard wrote:
and their hard drives are definitely not going to be able to cache and write anywhere near 1Gb/s or more..

Wrong. What ever NBNco is saying about 10gbps in 5 years by the time 10gbps or even 1gbps are more common SSD's will be the norm.
Ace
May 27, 2011 2:19 PM
...or perhaps people might have actually one than one internet connected device in their home? We have some 8 internet connected devices in our house, and up to 4 people using them one time. Surely this will only become more common-place?

As for upgrading your router, it will really be a non-issue.
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