Cancel that noise

Researchers and engineers have actually come up with a few tricks to minimise the effect of the interference. One was developed by John Papandriopoulos at the University of Melbourne, and involves balancing the spectrum used for the signal in DSL circuits, so as to arrange it either to provide the best throughput or maximum stability.
Spectrum balancing can be combined with noise cancelling, or vectoring and this is where it gets interesting.
Vectoring is held up as the silver bullet that will take care of all the problems with interference. It works in a similar fashion to newer multi-antennae MIMO techniques, and basically removes noise on the line.
It is extremely clever stuff, but how easy is it for operators to deploy it on the network?
It turns out that vectoring requires quite some change for VDSL2 deployments. First, vectoring uses modems at each end of the line to calculate and remove the line noise.
Obviously, the modems at both ends need to support vectoring – new customer premises equipment is needed, in other words – but they also need to talk to each other. Ideally, the modems should be made by the same telco equipment vendor for best interoperability.
So it follows that all the copper pairs in the binder also have to be controlled by one service provider, otherwise vectoring won’t be effective. That stands to reason as vectoring takes into account the interference generated by all the copper wires, so if some are left to their own devices, it’s just not going to work.
What that means is that there will be no more unbundled local loops if vectoring is to take place. A single service provider will manage all the copper, with wholesale access done at the bitstream level.
This is before you consider that vectoring doesn’t extend beyond 400 to 500 metres at the very most, necessitating a large number of cabinets (“nodes”), each with data backhaul and power requirements.
Solution to a problem of a bygone era
The above is of course a dream scenario for traditional telcos and their vendors: one network owner-operator with a single equipment supplier, set up with public funding.
From a competition point of view, however, a single service provider managing the vectored lines is suboptimal. Wholesaled bitstream access would mean lower margins for ISPs, and far less product differentiation. You basically get the vectored VDSL2 flavour that the service provider offers and that’s that.
For customers, less product and service differentiation spells limited choice. Just like how it used to be.
Monday will tell if the NBN Co review underway by the government will propose a return to the era of a monopoly infrastructure provider for the sake of politics.
Juha Saarinen is a technology journalist based in Auckland, New Zealand.