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Carriers Claim IPTV Wiring Worries

After IPTV networks are built and a subscriber signs up, the carrier can breathe easy, right? Maybe not. U.S. carriers say one of the biggest IPTV challenges they face is making IPTV service available on all the TVs in a household (see NAB2005: Telco Video Bingo).

The IPTV signal typically enters the household via an Ethernet connection to an ADSL modem, which connects to a set-top box, which plugs into the TV (see Scientific-Atlanta Wins $195M SBC Deal). But U.S. households typically have two or three televisions and the various costs of running new CAT-5 cable to those additional sets are substantial.

“It’s what I call the dirty little secret of IPTV,” says Entone Technologies Inc. CEO Steve McCay. “The huge issue today is that it’s one thing to get the signal to one TV, but what if you have four or five TVs in the home?” (See BNS Expands With Entone IPTV .)

To get the IPTV signal from the main TV to sets in the bedrooms costs about $800, according to some accounts of carriers delivering IPTV today. Here’s how it breaks down: two additional set-top boxes at $150 each, new CAT-5 cabling at $50, approximately eight hours of skilled installation at $50 per hour, and a “windshield cost” (gas and depreciation on the service vehicle) of $50.

“We do truck rolls where I was hoping they would do the installation in 2 hours and they are there for 6 hours,” says Bill DeMuth, CTO of SureWest Communications (Nasdaq: SURW), which has offered IPTV service since 2002 (see IPTV Scramble Is On). “This is our biggest problem.”

So who pays for such a big headache? Coaxsys Inc. director of marketing Ted Archer says that IPTV operators all have different ways of dealing with the costs.

Some will offer limited or no inside wiring to go along with an IPTV installation, Archer says. But he maintains that carriers really aren't in a position to demand a big upfront fee from their customers.

“From the customer’s prospective, if you look at them and say 'I’m going to charge you $350 in installation charges,' they’ll just stay with their cable service,” Archer says.

Satellite providers offer prospective customers two rooms of free installation to move from cable to satellite. Add that to the free months of service often included in the deal, and you arrive at an average customer acquisition cost of around $700, cable industry researchers say.

Adding to the telecom carrier stakes is the fact that once a carrier wires a new subscriber's home, it loses that investment if the subscriber cancels their service, because the wiring can't be taken back.

While carriers are figuring out this quagmire, several equipment vendors are stepping in with suggested solutions. Coaxsys, Entone, and a few other companies market devices that allow the IPTV signal to travel over existing coaxial cable to the other TVs in the home.

San Mateo, Calif.-based Entone makes a gateway device, called Hydra, which terminates a single Ethernet connection and sends the IPTV signal over coax to each TV in the house, eliminating the need for separate set-top boxes, McCay says.

Coaxsys uses a slightly different approach (see Consolidated Uses Coaxsys for IPTV). Its device, called TVNet, creates an in-home IP network that utilizes coax to link to each set-top box in the house, and can support other IP devices such as digital video recorders (DVRs) and gaming devices in other parts of the home.

The set-top box makers are also getting into the act. Amino Technologies plc and ReadyLinks Inc. have teamed up to develop a HPNA adapter called the ReadyLinks SmartFoot that links Amino set-top boxes to the others in the home using coax or telephone wiring.

The solution to the home wiring problem could eventually be a wireless one. Wireless chipmaker Airgo Networks Inc. has developed a high-bandwidth chip utilizing the 802.11n standard, which, when baked into set-top boxes, will allow wireless communication among all IP-speaking devices in the household, says Airgo spokesman Joe Volat.

In the U.S., the only IPTV installations being deployed so far are by small, regional telephone companies. But larger carriers, such as SBC, are aware of the problem and will have to figure out a way around it soon enough (see SBC Touts IPTV Servicesand SBC: IPTV's Day Has Come).

The only thing that's clear at this point is that no standard way of handling home wiring exists. “Some telcos are saying ‘we’ll give you one TV,’ or they’re saying ‘we’ll give you two TVs but we’re not going to put the wiring inside your house,’ while others are saying ‘we’re just going to take the time and wire all the rooms and just get it done,’” Coaxsys's Archer says.

— Mark Sullivan, Reporter, Light Reading

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merlingillespie
User Ranking
Monday May 16, 2005 6:12:56 AM
no ratings
I was under the impression that it was almost taken for granted now that the only way to make the the initial outlay weigh up from a provider perspective was full convergence of services.
It may not be cost affective to switch to an HDTV provider who charges a 300 dollar setup cost, but what if the HDTV provider is also providing voice, and internet services over that same connection? Assuming that savings are being made on the monthly recurring costs for each service then the overall cost of changing to a consolodated package very quickly makes sense.
A lot of providers of both Television and Internet are investing large amounts of capital in carrier class IP Telephony solutions for easy home rollouts of this nature. Even more again multicast enabled ISPs are offering private interconnects of source-specific-multicast enabled last mile services to Television providers in effort to further converge these solutions if they are unable to already. Thus reducing capital expenditure and increasing margin.

Kanjanie
User Ranking
Sunday May 15, 2005 1:55:33 PM
no ratings
I agree with nearly every one of your points but have an observation. The truck rolls to service a work order to install a service that needs a change to the distribution frame, it is very unlikely that they will be dealing with hundreds of homes on that roll. So do we need to automate the last mile by bring the distribution frame to the same level as the rest of the network. Then they the carriers need to think how they will delivery services rather than rolling trucks and it is not people going to the home that model just does not scale with the options avail able to the user in his/her home.
praxis7
User Ranking
Saturday May 14, 2005 12:39:53 PM
no ratings
Your observation is correct, but the fact is that one truck roll can work on a copper bundle serving hundreds of homes, but it takes hundreds of truck rolls to install services in each of those homes. And with triple-play type installs, much more time in spent in each home costing more money. All the metrics and culture built up over the decades by telcos installing phone service are out the door. Up front the triple play is more expensive and time consuming than existing copper voice services alone, but over time the higher ARPU will dwarf that of old telephone services. But they have to figure out how to lower the costs of installation and that will come by decreasing the time spent in the home by the installer.
Kanjanie
User Ranking
Friday May 13, 2005 6:42:52 PM
no ratings
Surely the question is not only the wiring in the house but also delivering of the video over DSL uless we believe the Carriers are all going to become cale companies and forget the copper loop. The biggest cost to a telco is labor and a large fraction of that is in moves adds and changes to the last mile copper plant. So trucks roll both for the house and for the outside plant.
praxis7
User Ranking
Friday May 13, 2005 3:12:45 PM
The home is a very harsh networking environment. WLAN, even 802.11n, is not a panacea for service providers, and neither are the new HPNA, or PLC technologies. Service providers require a solution that can be installed quickly, is very reliable (WLAN, even 802.11n can not guarantee reliable operation in *every* installed home), secure (how long before the latest WLAN security is broken creating a service provider's and content owner's ultimate worst nightmare?), and scalable to higher throughput rates for future services. Homeplug AV bandwidth is shared with the neighborhood creating non-deterministic throughput rates ongoing, and coax solutions will still require some rewiring 30%-40% of the time so diminishing the value of that solution. Entone, Zhone, and any others additionally attempting to collapse the STBs into the RG (residential gateway) face coax issues as well as problems with added software and interoperability complexity in their systems that also degrade the value of their solutions. This is a very interesting problem.
issey
User Ranking
Friday May 13, 2005 1:38:15 AM
no ratings
The article talks about wiring worries.

A Wired solution yes, from the CO or cabinet to the subscriber with xDSL, Fiber whatever.. but beyond that wireless (802.11n) is the way to go within the home.

Wired and wireless complement each other.
Terp
User Ranking
Friday May 13, 2005 1:24:41 AM
no ratings
RTL- I think he means design-in with the Baked-in” it’s a new one on me too. At least that’s the why I read it.

Doco- 1 hour? I have never seen a cable or sat install take only 1 hour. A personal example, we had sat “installed” I use term install light since we already had the dish put up and lined up and the guy was still her over an hour setting up three TVs and the house was already wired. Is 8 hour hours is extreme yes but 1 hour that’s unrealistic too.
doco
User Ranking
Thursday May 12, 2005 7:42:43 PM
no ratings

I can believe that they are spending more time than they want to do the installations - but 8 hours - come on. When was the last time you heard of a cable install (even in an old home) or a Digital-Sat install taking more than an hour? And that is providing multiple outlets, using coax which has big bend radiuses, and bigger diameter than Cat-5.

They must be actually doing the wiring really nicely snaked through walls with minimal damage to the home.

If they take a lesson from the cable installers in the 80s (or the satalite installers of today) they will quickly learn that an 3/8" x 18" drill bit couple with some outside the house runs will solve almost any install problem in a few minutes.

Oh wait..... What am I advocating....... shhhhhhhh!!!!
RTL Rules
User Ranking
Thursday May 12, 2005 5:19:41 PM
no ratings
Anyone have a feel for whether content providers would be comfortable with the use of wireless links? They're pretty protective, demanding encryption on wired links, so "wireless" might push some buttons...

This isn't a technical question about good/bad or 802.11 encryption, BTW.

RTL
vrparente
User Ranking
Thursday May 12, 2005 4:47:04 PM
Sony's "Location Free TV" product is WiFi based (802.11a/b/g). It's not that there can't or won't be issues with WiFi -- it's that wireless provides a solution to the wired and mobile problem. After all the idea of watching TV on a "location free tv" or on a tablet (what's the difference) is here to stay and grow.
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