commsday summit 2010 - nbn co...a small graphic design firm specialising in 3d design and animation....
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CommsDay Summit 2010
Mike Quigley
CEO NBN Co
20th April 2010
1
NBN Co Supporting Retail Service Providers (RSPs)
Retail Service Providers (RSPs)
Simple products
Wide coverage
Effective B2B interface
Cost effective
Support diversity of RSP
business models
Driven by innovation
Differentiation is key
Diverse product set
End user segmentation
Deliver value to end
users
2
A Diversity of Wholesale and Retail Business Models
Re
tail
Layer 2 Ethernet AccessNetwork Wholesaler
Retail service
provider
Retail service
provider
Retail service
provider
Retail service
provider
Layer 3
Wholesaler
Layer 2
Tunnel Protocol
Wholesaler
Layer 2
Backhaul
Wholesaler
Wh
ole
sale
3
Australia – At least 90% Fibre Coverage
4
Fixed Bandwidth Demand
5
Applications Evolution
6
Consumer and Business Wholesale Products
Consumer Products
Business-grade Products
Asymmetric speeds
Consumer grade
Mass roll out
High availability
Symmetric, higher speeds
Guaranteed reliable bandwidth
Business-grade Ethernet features
SOHO & SME(single site)
Top-end SME(multi site)
Enterprise(Large/branch n/w)
Both GPON and point-to-point fibre will be used to deliver Business-grade products
Better response and restoration timeframes
Available across entire NBN footprint
7
Small Business Bandwidth Drivers
Potential
Ban
dw
idth
Req
uir
em
en
ts
A small graphic design firm specialising in 3D design and animation.
They currently operate across two sites and employ eight staff.
Up to 5mbps 10mbps Symmetrical +50mbps Symmetrical
Here & Now Emerging
Email designs to clients
globally.
Skype for international
voice calling.
Online banking for
invoicing & payroll.
Regular remote backup of
important data.
Software-as-a-Service for
invoicing & payments, HR
management & anti-virus.
High-definition voice & video
conferencing.
Online collaboration with
remote workers & clients.
Real-time remote backup
of all data.
100% thin-client
computing.
Interactive online training
of new staff or for new
services via video-on-
demand.
3D video-conferencing
& collaboration across
multiple parties – locally
& globally.
8
Industry Bandwidth Drivers:The Healthcare example
Online remote consultations
& ePrescriptions.
Remote diagnosis of
electronic medical imaging
files by radiologists & other
specialists.
In-home monitoring of
elderly & chronic disease
sufferers – including activity
monitoring & alarms.
Emerging national
framework for individual
electronic health records.
30mbps
Full HD remote
consultations & emergency
medicine.
Ubiquitous sharing of large
3D medical imaging data.
Real-time, in-home
monitoring of biometrics for
elderly & chronically ill
patients.
Wide-spread usage &
acceptance of media-rich
electronic health records.
Limited online
consultation &
ePrescribing trials.
Limited sharing of medical
imaging files.
Basic electronic in-home
monitoring alarms.
Piecemeal electronic
health record systems.
Here & Now Potential
Ban
dw
idth
Req
uir
em
en
ts
Up to 5mbps 100mbps
The Australian healthcare industry is facing significant challenges around an ageing
population, chronic disease, skills shortages & remote/rural service provision.
Efficiently using scarce resources and enhancing quality of life.
Emerging
9
Latest LTE/SAE trials show significant differences
between peak rates and end-user throughput
Notes: 2x20MHz, 2x2 MIMO
Source: LTE/SAE Trial Initiative (Oct 2009)
10
Base station requirements to deliver a “best-efforts”
wireless broadband service to metro Australia
Notes:
1. Assumed radio capacity is 360Mbps per site, based on LTE (3 sectors) operating at 700Mhz with 120 MHz of spectrum and benefits of 1.6x spectral efficiency uplift from IMT
Advanced.
2. Provisioning of capacity assumes a contention ratio of 1:5 (e.g.: 1 in 5 subscribers active at any one time).
Source: NBN Co analysis; ABS8146.0 - Household Use of Information Technology, Australia, 2008-09
Current
household
broadband
penetration in
Australia
0
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
120,000
140,000
160,000
180,000
200,000
10% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Num
ber o
f bas
e st
atio
ns r
equi
red
Broadband take-up (as % of metro premises)
2 Mbps CIR / 10 Typical
3 Mbps CIR / 15 Typical
4 Mbps CIR / 20 Typical
5 Mbps CIR / 25 Typical
6 Mbps CIR / 30 Typical
7 Mbps CIR / 35 Typical
Current
household
broadband
penetration
in
Australia
11
Fibre penetration in key economies
December 2009 Ranking Source: Fibre-to-
the-Home Council February 2010
12
Regional Initiatives
13
PON Evolutionary Paths
Wavelengths per direction
To
tal P
ON
ba
nd
wid
th (
Gb
ps
)
10G PON
2.5G PON
4λ x 10G PON
(40Gbps)
4λ x 2.5G PON
(10Gbps)
0 1 2 3 4 5
10
100
10G TDM PON electronics
technical challenges are being
worked on by the industry—will
take net 2–3 years for maturity
TDM GPON is starting
mass deployment now
and has a long life to go
Hybrid GPON may
be a practical
evolutionary step
Longer-term
evolution to
40Gbps is possible
14
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