WASHINGTON, March 15—The world's largest international conference on optical communication and networking convenes this month from March 21-25 at the San Diego Convention Center. Nearly 10,000 attendees are expected at the Optical Fiber Communication Conference and Exposition/National Fiber Optic Engineers Conference (OFC/NFOEC), and journalists are invited to attend the meeting for free.
OFC/NFOEC is the premier meeting where experts from industry and academia intersect and share their results, experiences, and insights on the future of optical communication and the technologies that will enable it. This year's lineup will feature many engaging talks and panels, including:
- PLENARYPRESENTATIONS: "Broadband in Africa" by Brian Herlihy, president, SEACOM, Mauritius; "Beyond Today's Broadband Networks" by Philippe Keryer, executive vice president, president, Carrier Product Group, Alcatel-Lucent, USA; and "Challenges for New Generation Networks" by Hideo Miyahara, president, NICT, Japan. To access speaker bios and talk abstracts, see: http://www.ofcnfoec.org/conference_program/Plenary.aspx.
- MARKET WATCH, a three-day series of presentations and panel discussions on the applications and business of optical communications, featuring esteemed guest speakers from the industrial, research and investment communities. See: http://www.ofcnfoec.org/conference_program/Market_Watch.aspx.
- SERVICE PROVIDER SUMMIT, a dynamic program with topics and speakers of interest to CTOs, network architects, network designers and technologists within the service provider and carrier sector. See: http://www.ofcnfoec.org/conference_program/Service_Provider_Summit.aspx.
SCIENTIFIC HIGHLIGHTS
The conference also features a comprehensive technical program with talks covering the latest research related to all aspects of optical communication. Much of the research being presented in 2010 covers what's in store for the future of broadband Internet. Some of the highlights, outlined below, include:
- An Express-Lane for the Internet
- Piping Wireless into the Home
- Looking into the Future of Data-Routing with IRIS
- A Better Way to Watch YouTube: OpenFlow Opens Up Carrier Networks
Additional research summaries in the areas of green IT, optical interconnects in supercomputers, and an all-optical fast Fourier transform are available online at: http://www.ofcnfoec.org/media_center/ofc_releases/2010/AddnlNews.aspx.
Research news on using LEDs to broadcast data (http://www.ofcnfoec.org/media_center/ofc_releases/2010/DeskLamp.aspx) and cloud computing (http://www.ofcnfoec.org/media_center/ofc_releases/2010/BacktotheFuture.aspx) has also been announced.
AN EXPRESS-LANE FOR THE INTERNET
The Internet is expected to be inundated in the future with billions of gigabytes (or exabytes) of data as high-definition video and other bandwidth-busting downloads become the norm. The cost of upgrading the Internet for this so-called "exaflood" could make Web connections too expensive for most consumers. Internet service providers may be able to keep prices down by opening up an express-lane for large data hauls.
It is estimated that 99 percent of the traffic volume of the Internet is devoted to large downloads—like movies, medical scans and financial data— that are only 1 percent of all data transfer sessions. These huge bundles are currently handled in the same way all data is handled by the Internet: the files are chopped up into little packets and then shuffled through traffic. Although this works fine for e-mail and Web pages, says MIT researcher Vincent Chan, it is very inefficient for large streams of data. An alternative, called optical flow switching (OFS), essentially opens a direct line between users that they can use for a few seconds all to themselves.
To reserve a spot on this express lane, users would send a request over the normal Internet. The most that someone would have to wait is a few seconds before data will start flowing. That's plenty fast for most people, but some users will be willing to pay extra to jump ahead in the queue.
Chan says that OFS can reduce the price per bit by 50 times compared to current electronic packet switching. The savings come from a simplified network architecture that has less overhead devoted to processing data address labels. An OFS test bed has been in operation for the last 10 years, connecting U.S. government sites on the east coast. Chan says there is now a "groundswell" of interest in OFS from Asia and Europe.
Talk OWI6, "Optical Flow Switching" (Wednesday, March 24, 9:30 - 10 a.m.)
PIPING WIRELESS INTO THE HOME
Besides carrying digital data, optical fibers can also transmit radio signals for wireless communication. So-called "radio-over-fiber" technology has been used to provide access to radio dead zones, but new research is looking into using this technology to broadcast wireless closer to home.
Radio over fiber (RoF) modulates an optical wavelength in the fiber with a radio signal. This solves the attenuation problem during transport of the signal, while allowing the centralization of signal generation and processing equipment. A wireless signal can be simply relayed down the fiber to remote antennas that cost relatively little to install and should be immune to upgrades. RoF is already being used to transmit wireless signals into hard to reach areas like tunnels and stadiums.
In his talk, Mikhail Popov of Acreo AB in Sweden reviews options for taking RoF into homes and buildings along the optical access (PON) infrastructure, as part of a general trend toward merging wired and wireless communication. Fiber in this case would already be carrying Internet traffic, but it could also carry cell phone conversations transmitted over a remote antenna installed in the premises. In a multi-user scenario, the radio signals would pass directly onto the fiber without any processing. However, for a single home, it would make more sense to set up a "femtonode" that converts the radio waves from wireless devices into Internet data and uses the home Internet connection to connect to other mobile users. In any case, this network sharing could provide indoor wireless coverage at a fraction of the cost of relying solely on outdoor base stations, Popov says.
In the future, wireless home networks may be built on an RoF skeleton. As of now, most homes and businesses use WiFi to connect to laptops, but soon TVs and other media devices may need a wireless hook-up. One way to get more bandwidth is to trade WiFi for ultra-wideband (UWB), which can support data rates that are 1,000 times faster. The trouble is that UWB can only travel approximately 10 meters and is unable to penetrate walls, so there needs to be a way to distribute the signal throughout a house or building.
One solution is to use optical fibers. In a separate talk, Benoit Charbonnier of R&D Orange FT Group in France will describe a UWB RoF network that he and his colleagues have built. Their design calls for the UWB signal being transmitted and received by access points in each room. These access points simply relay the wireless signal over the fiber network to a central hub that down-converts the radio frequency to facilitate processing. This network architecture allows all the hardware to be transparent to whatever wireless products are being used in the home. Charbonnier will present recent test results that show his team's RoF network can distribute a 3 Gbit/s signal with good fidelity.
Talk OWQ6, "The Convergence of Wired and Wireless Services Delivery in Access and In-Home Networks" (Wednesday, March 24, 2:30 - 3 p.m.)
Talk OThO3, "Ultra-Wideband Radio over Fiber Techniques and Networks" (Thursday, March 25, 1:30 - 2 p.m.)
LOOKING INTO THE FUTURE OF DATA-ROUTING WITH IRIS
The Internet is on the verge of overheating, as big network routers are forced to sort through more and more data packets. One solution is to install photonic routers that leave data in the form of light, thereby avoiding unnecessary electronic processing. Researchers at Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs and LGS Innovations, both in New Jersey, have built an operational photonic router prototype that could conceivably manage hundreds of terabits of data per second.
The DARPA-funded IRIS project is unique among other photonic routers in that it separates the two main jobs of a router: switching where packets go and managing when packets leave. This division of labor makes it easy to scale the design up for higher data rates. Like a traditional router, IRIS is connected to multiple optical fibers as input and output. Each fiber carries several wavelengths of light that encode their own separate stream of data packets. IRIS only reads and electronically processes the address header of each incoming data packet. The actual information contained in the packet is held temporarily inside a small integrated optical buffer until its time of departure. "The packet does not get converted into an electronic signal at any point," says Jurgen Gripp of Bell Labs, Alcatel-Lucent. This can provide power savings over electronic routers in many but not all cases.
Gripp and his team members designed and built IRIS in such a way that light packets travel on photonic integrated circuits. "The level of integration of optical components is a breakthrough," Gripp says. The researchers have tested the IRIS prototype on a network testbed and are now preparing to hook it up to commercial routers so that real Internet traffic can flow through it.
Talk OThP3, "Photonic Terabit Routers: The IRIS Project" (Thursday, March 25, 1:30 – 2 p.m.)
A BETTER WAY TO WATCH YOUTUBE: OPENFLOW OPENS UP CARRIER NETWORKS
To ensure that we can all watch YouTube without interruption, major Internet service providers must manage two very different switching technologies. Wide area "IP" networks made up of packet switches are interconnected over long distances by circuit-switched "transport" networks.
A typical service provider operates and manages these two networks independently, leading to a duplication of functionality and resources as well as to higher operating costs. Additionally, the two networks do not dynamically interact. For example, in response to long-term changes in demand, IP network controllers must contact circuit-switch network controllers, who adjust the long-distance pipelines by manually plugging in new circuits that increase or decrease the bandwidth.
"This is a long, drawn-out process that can take days or week to accomplish," said Guru Parulkar. He and his team at Stanford University have developed a way to merge the two network architectures that could allow Internet service providers to cut costs and to respond more flexibly to the needs of their users.
Past efforts to bridge packet-based and circuit-based technologies have approached the problem with the assumption that the two networks, which have very different architectures, must remain distinct. As a result, trying to span the two networks has resulted in very complex solutions. The transformation of circuit-based technology to IP has vastly changed this equation as both packet-based and circuit-based applications run on the same IP platform. But little has been done to show the possibility and consistency of a uniform solution. The OpenFlow project takes advantage of this architectural evolution in the direction of true convergence. It merges the two types of networks by blurring the distinction between packet switches and circuit switches, presenting them both as "data-plane" flow switch abstractions (that switch at different granularities) to an external, decoupled "control plane." Such an abstraction is achieved between the controller and the switches via the OpenFlow protocol. This then enables new capabilities that can exploit the mix of switching technologies dynamically.
For example, the "controller can configure a circuit in seconds instead of days or weeks," said Vinesh Gudla, one of the students working on the project. Gudla will present a set-up of two packet switches connected by a circuit switch that uses OpenFlow to stream video.
Talk OtuG2, "Experimental Demonstration of OpenFlow Control of Packet and Circuit Switches" (Tuesday, March 23, 2:30 - 2:45 p.m.)
Source: Optical Society of America