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Ray Le Maistre

Infinera Boasts 8Tbit/s Pipe

November 28, 2012 | Ray Le Maistre | Comments (3)
   
 
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10:40 AM -- Infinera Corp. (Nasdaq: INFN) is beating its chest with pride today following a demonstration of very high-capacity transmission across a less than optimum network. (See Infinera, Nissho Demo 8Tb Link.)

Working with a local partner, Nissho Electronics, Infinera managed to provision 8 Tbit/s of capacity on an 800-kilometer network comprising Dispersion-Shifted Fiber (DSF), a challenging medium for DWDM systems, it would seem.

Infinera says it was able to achieve this because its DTN-X platform can not only provision multiple 500Gbit/s super-channels, but also because of the Polarization Mode Dispersion (PMD) compensation performance of the product.

The vendor points out that under the same conditions, but using non-DSF fiber and QPSK (Quadrature Phase Shift Keying) on the DTN-X, 8 Tbit/s of capacity could be provisioned beyond 2,500 kilometers, "highlighting the unique challenges of the DSF fiber in Japan."

The vendor talked with Light Reading about its PMD performance, and tests it had been doing with Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ), a few months ago, noting the potential for squeezing greater capacity and/or reach from older fibers. (See ECOC 2012: Infinera's Tier 1 Traction.)

Infinera already has NTT Communications Corp. (NYSE: NTT) as a customer in Japan -- now, in a country with advanced fiber access and well-established 4G services, it will be looking to help other operators work their legacy fiber assets harder and win some new business.

— Ray Le Maistre, International Managing Editor, Light Reading

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Phil Harvey
User Ranking
Wednesday November 28, 2012 1:07:46 PM
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Yes, it is just a demonstration. But that means they're getting close. 

Ray Le Maistre
User Ranking
Wednesday November 28, 2012 12:44:38 PM
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What would be even more impressive is if that sort of capacity was enabled in a production network in Japan.

There's also the growing volume of "cloud" traffic in Japan too, so plenty of metro and long-distance growth to and from data centers adding to the capacity crunch.

 

NB: Correction -- initially I had super-channels running at 500Mbit/s (not so super) instead of 500Gbit/s. Apologies for that slip-up. The article now has the correct speed. 

Phil Harvey
User Ranking
Wednesday November 28, 2012 11:18:04 AM

And necessary, i would imagine, given the number of FTTH customers in the country.

If you, like me, had to look up PMD, here's a link with a crisp explanation:

http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=159216

 

The blogs and comments are the opinions only of the writers and do not reflect the views of Light Reading. They are no substitute for your own research and should not be relied upon for trading or any other purpose.
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