Universal Edge QAM Market Heats Up

Good question: Who's entering the market with a next-gen or 'universal' edge QAM? Better question: Who isn't?

Jeff Baumgartner, Senior Editor

June 19, 2007

7 Min Read
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If you're on the show floor at this week's Society of Cable Telecommunications Engineers (SCTE) Cable-Tec Expo in Orlando, Fla., chances are good that you won't be able to swing a cat without hitting a vendor that makes (or is about to introduce) a universal edge QAM, a new breed of equipment that will allow cable operators to manage bandwidth more efficiently across a range of digital video and high-speed data applications

But first a word about QAM (quadrature amplitude modulation) itself. It's a fast (38.8 Mbit/s per 6MHz of spectrum), wideband modulator. It takes in the digital signal and modulates it so it can be passed through the analog portion of the cable network until it reaches the cable set-top box (in the digital video example).

The QAM element of the cable network has been evolving, supporting more services with each generation. Costs, meanwhile, have been tracking downward, heading toward commodity levels.

"We are seeing a lot of pressure... to change from a moderate quantity product to more of a mass market kind of product," says Bill Dawson, vice president of access strategy for C-COR Corp. (Nasdaq: CCBL).

"There's such a demand for narrowcast bandwidth. It's not going away, so this [edge QAM market] is a good place to be," adds Michael Adams, vice president of systems architecture for Tandberg Television .

The first QAMs on the market could support only digital broadcast video services. Video on demand (VOD) was added next. The third generation brought in switched digital video (SDV). The generation after that will support Docsis traffic.

These fourth-generation products are considered "universal" because they can be used for all of those services. They are also considered more efficient because the capacity of each QAM can be distributed flexibly among those services, rather than being stovepiped to just one type of service.

The universal edge QAM (eQAM) will also play a big role in the development of Docsis 3.0 and the modular cable modem termination system (M-CMTS), which allows operators to scale their downstream and upstream capabilities independently.

Docsis-supported eQAMs "won't come into play until the M-CMTS market starts up," Adams predicts.

But vendors agree that the big driver for next-gen eQAMs today is SDV, a bandwidth-saving technique that has already gained favor with Time Warner Cable Inc. (NYSE: TWC) and Cablevision Systems Corp. (NYSE: CVC). Meanwhile, Comcast Corp. (Nasdaq: CMCSA, CMCSK) is starting to test the SDV waters in Denver, Colo. and Cherry Hill, N.J. (See Comcast Puts SDV Vendors to the Test and Comcast Reveals SDV Test Beds.)

Not all MSOs are launching SDV yet. "But if you took a census it would show that they are all at least thinking of it," Dawson says.

Vendors Tee Up eQAMs
If you're a cable technology supplier these days, there's a good chance that you have an edge QAM device in the portfolio somewhere.

Table 1: Vendors Go to the Edge

Company

Product

Arris

Keystone D5 DMTS

BigBand Networks

Broadband Multimedia-Service Edge (BME)

Casa Systems Inc.

C2100/C2150 Universal EdgeQAM

C-COR

CHP eQAM

Cisco Systems/Scientific Atlanta

Universal Edge QAM (U-EQAM)

GoBackTV

GigaQAM 3000

Harmonic Inc.

NSG9000

LiquidXStream

Product TBA

Motorola

MSEN (Modular SEN)

RGB Networks

Universal Scalable Modulator (USM)

Tandberg Television

EQ8096

Teleste Corp.

Virtuoso Edge QAM

Vecima Networks

HyperQAM





Motorola Inc. (NYSE: MOT) is coming out with a next-gen eQAM later this year, with shipments expected by the fourth quarter, according to Ray Botempi, director of product management for Motorola's digital video solutions unit.

Motorola's present QAM product can handle broadcast video, VOD, and switched digital video. The new product will incorporate high-speed data and serve as a component of Motorola's M-CMTS.

C-Cor recently introduced its next-gen product, the CHP eQAM, a 1GHz-capable device considered a modular component of the company's CHP Max5000 Headend Platform. Each 2-RU product supports up to 120 QAM channels. It's in lab trials now with two "major" North American MSOs, with commercial availability slated for September. (See C-COR Launches Edge QAM.)

Initially, that product is considered a video edge QAM, but the "hooks" are in place to turn it into a universal edge QAM via a software upgrade, Dawson says.

Cisco Systems Inc. (Nasdaq: CSCO) just unveiled the Universal Edge QAM (U-EQAM). Like C-COR's entrant, Cisco's sports a 1GHz implementation. (See Cisco Unveils Edge QAM .)

Harmonic Inc. (Nasdaq: HLIT), a long-standing QAM vendor, introduced its latest generation product, the NSG9000, at the 2006 Cable-Tec Expo. That product is capable of running M-CMTS apps, according to Nimrod Ben-Natan, the company's vice president of marketing and strategy.

He says the need for QAM resource allocation is being driven by operators as they increase capacity on service groups through node splits. Further down the road, MSOs also could use those QAMs to bypass the CMTS to deliver IP-based unicast or multicast video services.

"We think IPTV is an interesting delivery infrastructure [that is] not unique to the telco," Ben-Natan says.

To Page 2

New names
Startups specializing in edge QAM technology will also make the scene. LiquidXstream Systems Inc., founded in April 2005, has been in stealth mode. It's expected to make some official announcements at this week's show.

Other suppliers are applying most of their efforts to specific regions of the world. GoBackTV Inc. , a company made up of several former Com21 execs, is focusing mostly on the European cable market and with Tier 2 and Tier 3 operators. One of its key wins is with French MSO Numericable-SFR .

GoBackTV's market focus is by design for a company that has had edge QAM products on the market for about two years. "Part of [our strategy] is being comfortable with the customer base. We weren't big enough to take on the Comcasts of the world yet," says Rei Brockett, GoBackTV's director of product marketing.

With so many vendors vying for market share, they'll be challenged to differentiate their products on factors other than price. They'll also have to build a solid market base so they can withstand the inevitable shakeout.

"Just having density and the price is not enough to get it into the market," Harmonic's Ben-Natan says. "Performance is something most MSOs won't sacrifice."

C-COR, for example, is playing up its 1GHz capabilities, viewing it as future-proofing in case MSOs decide to upgrade their plants from 750 MHz or 860 MHz.

Adams likens the eQAM market to the high-end audio market. "If you put audiophiles in a room, they can say which [audio system] is better. To some extent there is some level of quality that isn't specified" with the edge QAM, he explains.

In Tandberg's case, the company will focus on two factors: power consumption and reliability.

"Our goal is that these things should never fail," Adams says, adding that the company estimates a mean time between failure of 134,000 hours, or about 15 years.

But Adams also believes competition in the sector will produce at least five QAM suppliers for any given MSO that can meet all of its desired specifications for reliability, power consumption, density, and even price.

"If I was an operator, I would be rubbing my hands in glee," he says.

— Jeff Baumgartner, Site Editor, Cable Digital News

About the Author

Jeff Baumgartner

Senior Editor, Light Reading

Jeff Baumgartner is a Senior Editor for Light Reading and is responsible for the day-to-day news coverage and analysis of the cable and video sectors. Follow him on X and LinkedIn.

Baumgartner also served as Site Editor for Light Reading Cable from 2007-2013. In between his two stints at Light Reading, he led tech coverage for Multichannel News and was a regular contributor to Broadcasting + Cable. Baumgartner was named to the 2018 class of the Cable TV Pioneers.

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