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Valley Wonk
Craig Matsumoto

Ciena Goes Terabit

October 31, 2011 | Craig Matsumoto | Comments (29)
   
 
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11:00 AM -- As you might imagine, 1Tbit/s optical transmission is already running in labs. It's just not ready for public presentation.

I got a look at one setup last week, while visiting Ciena Corp. (Nasdaq: CIEN) in Ottawa. The setup didn't disappoint: three shelves of gear clattered together, as if someone had spent a day at the OFC/NFOEC flea market.

That's not meant to be an insult; it's fun to see technology that's still in that raw prototype stage.

This particular experiment had the extra fun of being in a historic location -- Carling Place, the former Nortel Networks Ltd. campus. This is where they developed 10Gbit/s DWDM and Nortel's first 100Gbit/s products. I got to meet Charles Laperle, one of those longtime researchers who's carried on with Ciena -- a wiry, gray-haired fellow with small glasses.

We weren't allowed to photograph the terabit setup. So, I took a few other touristy shots around the lab -- like these massive stores of fiber, all spooled up and ready to go. It's kept on the shelf like extra flour in the pantry.

The fiber stash -- because when you need 3,000 km, you need 3,000 km. That's Helen Xenos's reflection in the glass.

This visit was part of a media day, which in turn was part of the five-week Vectors Summit, during which Ciena brings a few hundred customers through the labs to give feedback on the company's R&D plans.

This was also the place where coherent optical transmission was developed. Dino DiPerna, vice president of transport R&D, said it came about after Nortel had glued together an 80Gbit/s non-coherent demo for Telecom '99. It was even less elegant than the 1Tbit/s shelves.

"I like to say we had every element in the periodic table," DiPerna told media visitors. "The radio guys came over from the other side of the campus and said, 'Is that all you can do? Turn a light on and off?'" The radio guys, of course, had been using coherent receivers for years. The mixing of cultures at Carling Place brought the two sides together.

Dino DiPerna, holding court during a morning media session.

As for exactly how Ciena's doing coherent 1Tbit/s, they're using 16-QAM modulation and five carriers of 200Gbit/s each, creating a 1Tbit/s waveform that can fit in a 200GHz space. Laperle's demo puts that onto a fiber also carrying 83 100Gbit/s wavelengths, to show that terabit can share real-world conditions. The combination points to a future of flexible-grid optics.

Getting to 1Tbit/s has a lot to do with digital signal processing. Coherent detection involves having a DSP on the receiving side, but Ciena is adding one to the transmitter as well, said Helen Xenos, senior product and solutions marketing manager at Ciena.

Our video crew trudging down a Carling Place hallway. You'll see the fruits of their labor later.

— Craig Matsumoto, West Coast Editor, Light Reading

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bogowan
User Ranking
Thursday April 19, 2012 4:20:28 PM
no ratings

For those of you who'd like to see the Terabit demo that Craig saw as part of this article, we just posted a video of the demo in action.  You can find it here:

http://www.ciena.com/corporate/blog/Cienas-1-Terabit-optical-transport-demo.html

Duh!
User Ranking
Sunday November 6, 2011 3:13:35 PM

Schmitt --

Personal identity is not necessary to maintain civility.  There are reasons why posters here (myself included) must remain anonymous on this forum.  Eliminate anonymity, and the conversation is going to be mostly between authorized spokespeople and independent consultants and analysts who don't care who they annoy.

On the other hand, the odd bit of "curating" in this forum has helped maintain the level of the dialog.

tojofay
User Ranking
Saturday November 5, 2011 5:38:35 PM

Point taken, could'nt resist when it popped up in my inbox.

Time, of course, will tell- cheers!

laytonhasnochance
User Ranking
Friday November 4, 2011 8:06:51 PM

I think that should be submitted at the power point academy awards.

laytonhasnochance
User Ranking
Friday November 4, 2011 8:05:53 PM

Well I'll tell you wonder woman that you should keep the profanity down.  Until you have signed as many contracts as the other big players, I wouldn't wear those colours too loud linda.  You can't just flash in life. You have to deliver.

laytonhasnochance
User Ranking
Friday November 4, 2011 8:03:37 PM

And I am suppose to be impressed by a japanese order. The same place where widespread devestation occurred and their economy is so bad they may not be even able to pay their bills. Did you ever consider some announcements are politically motivated? I could post TEN news articles better than that about optical announcments from huwaeii, alu and ciena. All are players in the 40g and 100g world. Not dreamers who have yet even to hit the pavement yet. People need proof and valid reviews are results orientated in todays workplace.  All this hype over a product not even delivered yet.  Why don't you start  your own inf message thread. You are in the wrong place.

fiberslut
User Ranking
Friday November 4, 2011 3:00:42 PM

" Talking infinera is kind of like talking about a yugo while the conversation is about a ferrari?  Very Bizarre"

WTF?  who is this "laytonhasnochance"?  does he understand fiber optics technology?

so INFN developed the world's first large-scale photonic circuits and then brought that to market in the industry's most innovative optical WDM platform in a decade, and then went on to eat both Nortel's and Ciena's lunch by taking nearly all of their long-haul WDM customers in the USA.....and they are a Yugo to CIEN's Ferrari?

that is is really funny. 

laytonhasnochance
User Ranking
Tuesday November 1, 2011 5:28:35 PM

Inf is 63 percent of ciena market cap today.  That's a sizeable gap.  This for a company that does not have a 40g prodcut and has not even released a 100g product. That's very very fishy. So here is what "might" happen. In the future, perhaps not so distant, expect these two to distance themselves and based on the reality of the situation I expect the market Gap to increase. Maybe things will tighten up if and when inf release a working 100g product that stands up over time. But that's the future so one really does not know how inf will deliver on that front? People already know what ciena delivers, how they deliver and what they expect them to deliver.  I don't know if you can say that for anybody else in this line of optical business?  I think you are being totally premature on your inf outlook.  Wishful thinking?  I checked the enterprise valuation. Inf is listed at 0.00 and Ciena is listed at 0.71. Sometimes people have to go into debt to take the lead.  There's always that argument. The answer is what happens when the competitors actually compete head to head with measureable results, with the same products, without gov't subsidies being involved. That's a true barometer.

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