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![]() Posted 2/01/2002 TV OVER ADSL BECOMES MORE PRACTICAL By Fred Dawson
Most dramatically, Alcatel and Thomson Multimedia demonstrated in mid-December delivery of MPEG2 video over ADSL at line rates as low as 700kbps. The demonstration used new encoders offered by Nextream, a joint venture between the two companies. Until now, the lower limits for TV-quality MPEG2 over any medium have been a minimum 1.5 mbps. The companies bill the technology as a standards-compatible breakthrough that will allow ILECs and CLECs to implement broadcast and interactive TV services over existing DSL platforms using any vendor's MPEG2-equipped DSL set-tops. Officials say the lower bit rates were achieved using multi-pass encoding and quality-restoring algorithms that operate in real time, thereby avoiding any breach of the standardized decoding methods used with MPEG2. "Having a widely used standards-based solution is essential to moving this market forward," says Herman Haas, director for video over DSL at Thomson Consumer Electronics, which is introducing its first line of DSL-based set-top terminals this year. "There's been little interest among the telephone guys in doing video over ADSL if it requires using MPEG4 or some other encoding technique that isn't in wide use." Alcatel views the lowering of cost barriers to telcos entering the consumer entertainment sphere as a vital requirement as competition increases and capital spending declines, says Mitch Strobin, vice president of marketing at the company's broadband network division. "What you're seeing is the result of Alcatel working with ILECs to help them realize their strategic ambitions of being able to compete with cable within the budgetary constraints imposed by the current economic climate," he says. "This technology makes it possible to deliver multiple channels of digital TV over already deployed ADSL systems, and that's what the ILECs need in order to compete cost effectively." While Thomson and Alcatel hope this initiative will make significant inroads into the U.S. ILEC market, officials acknowledge early success is more likely in overseas and Canadian markets, where telcos are eager to launch video entertainment services and, in some cases, already have done so. "Our initial commitment with this technology has been focused in Europe, where we're actively working with customers who will be undergoing trials this year," says Jim White, vice president of marketing for Alcatel's broadband network division in North America. "But we expect to be having a lot of communications with the ILECs in the U.S. There's a recognition of the cable threat now that MSOs (multiple system operators) are making serious inroads into the telephone business, so the timing is very good." So far, rural ILECS are the U.S. telcos showing the most interest in delivering video entertainment over ADSL links. In some cases, the rural ILECs are using video over copper rather than cable to expand their traditional TV operations into new territories. In other cases, the rural ILECs are exploiting the fact they have newer networks with shorter loop lengths than the big incumbents have. These telcos have been able to operate MPEG2 over ADSL at bit rates in the range of 6-8 mbps, but they, too, would like to have access to technology that makes more efficient use of bandwidth for MPEG2, notes Reed Majors, vice president for marketing and business development at Minerva Networks Inc. Minerva, a supplier of video headends for the DSL and other new markets, is addressing this need by offering a new encoder that allows these ILECs to squeeze two MPEG2 channels over their ADSL lines at bit rates of about 3.2mbps per channel, even when ATM is used as the transport medium, Majors says. "Many cable vendors supply encoders that deliver MPEG2 at lower speeds, such as 2.5mbps, but these devices cost three times as much as what we're offering to the DSL sector," he adds. "And the two channels of video delivered over ADSL using our technology are much higher quality than the digital TV you see at these lower rates from satellite and cable operators." The Nextream and Minerva solutions are addressing different market needs with different price points, and they aren't necessarily directly competitive with each other, Majors notes. What matters is solutions are entering the marketplace that will allow telephone companies to compete in the consumer broadband market with a full range of services without having to invest far more money in plant or proprietary multimedia platforms, he adds.
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