Title: Internet Access via Cable TV
1Internet Access via Cable TV
2Changes in the Cable Network
- The cable network was designed to deliver TV
signals in one direction from the Head-End to the
subscribers homes - To provide TV services Cable Operators had to
recreate a portion of the over-the-air radio
frequency (RF) spectrum within a sealed coaxial
cable line - Operators had to upgrade the cable network so
that signals could flow in both directions
3Changes in the Cable Network
- Cable Operators assign a spectrum of signal
frequencies to the cable network - One spectrum is used for the signals that move
from the Head-End towards the cable subscriber - Another spectrum of signal frequencies are used
for the signals that move from the cable
subscriber towards the Head-End
4Changes in the Cable Network
- By replacing existing one way amplifiers with two
way amplifiers Cable Operators are able to
separate the upstream and downstream signals and
amplify each direction separately in the right
frequency range
5Changes in the Cable Network
A Traditional Cable network
6Changes in the Cable Network
A Modern Cable network
7What is a Cable Modem?
8How Fast is a Cable Modem?
- Cable modem speeds vary widely
- Depends on the cable modem system
- Cable network architecture
- Traffic load.
- In the downstream direction (from the network to
the computer), network speeds can be up to 27
Mbps - BUT, this is an aggregate amount of bandwidth
that is shared by users.
9How Fast is a Cable Modem?
- Few computers will be capable of connecting at
such high speeds or have exclusive access to the
network - A more realistic number is 1 to 3 Mbps.
- In the upstream direction (from computer to
network), speeds can be up to 10 Mbps. - However, most modem producers have selected a
more optimum speed between 500 Kbps and 2.5 Mbps - AND, many cable operators limit the upstream
bandwidth to 128 or 384kbs
10How Fast is a Cable Modem?
- An asymmetric cable modem scheme is most common.
The downstream channel has a much higher
bandwidth allocation (faster data rate) than the
upstream, - primarily because Internet applications tend to
be asymmetric in nature. - Activities such as World Wide Web (http)
navigating and newsgroups reading (nntp) send
much more data down to the computer than to the
network.
11How Fast is a Cable Modem?
- Mouse clicks (URL requests) and e-mail messages
are not bandwidth intensive in the upstream
direction. - Image files and streaming media (audio and video)
are very bandwidth intensive in the downstream
direction.
12Real-world performance
- The theoretical performance of a Cable Modem is
based upon all other devices being able to work
at the same speed and performance as the Cable
Modem - However, in a similar way that the actual usable
bandwidth on a 10Mbps Ethernet connection reduces
to a 4Mbps, so too will the performance of a
Cable Modem connection be reduced
13Real-world performance
- The Cable network itself will suffer the same
problems of Internet performance as any other
Internet Service Provider (ISP) - Although performance to services on the cable
network itself can be amazingly fast, access to
'the outside world' will be slowed down by the
performance of other connections on the way.
14Real-world performance
- As usage on your segment grows (as more customers
are added) the bandwidth must be shared by more
people - Adding more cable network segments is very
expensive for the cable operator - If you connect to a remote Internet site that
itself has a connection speed equivalent to a T1
connection (1.5Mbps), then that is as fast as the
data can be served to you, no matter how fast
your receiving equipment is
15Who Makes Cable Modems?
- 3Com, Cisco Systems, Com21, General Instrument,
Motorola, Nortel Networks, Phasecom, Samsung,
Terayon, Toshiba, Zenith - And many others
16Cable Modem Technology
- It MOdulates and DEModulates signals
- Much more complicated than their telephone
counterparts - Cable modems can be part modem, part tuner, part
encryption/decryption device, part bridge, part
router, part network interface card, part SNMP
agent, and part Ethernet hub
17Cable Modem Technology
- Typically, a cable modem sends and receives data
in two slightly different fashions - In the downstream direction
- he digital data is modulated and then placed on a
typical 6 MHz television channel, somewhere
between 50 MHz and 750 MHz - 64 QAM is the preferred downstream modulation
technique, offering up to 27 Mbps per 6 MHz
channel - This signal can be placed in a 6 MHz channel
adjacent to TV signals on either side without
disturbing the cable television video signals.
18Cable Modem Technology
- The upstream channel is more tricky
- Typically, in a two-way activated cable network,
the upstream (also known as the reverse path) is
transmitted between 5 and 42 MHz - This tends to be a noisy environment, with RF
interference and impulse noise. Additionally,
interference is easily introduced in the home,
due to loose connectors or poor cabling - Since cable networks are tree and branch
networks, all this noise gets added together as
the signals travel upstream, combining and
increasing - Due to this problem, most manufacturers use QPSK
or a similar modulation scheme in the upstream
direction, because QPSK is more robust scheme
than higher order modulation techniques in a
noisy environment - The drawback is that QPSK is "slower" than QAM.
19Cable Modem Services
- The dominant service is high-speed Internet
access - This enables the typical array of Internet
services to be delivered at speeds far faster
than those offered by dial-up telephone modems - Other services will include
- access to streaming audio and video servers,
local content (community information and
services) - access to CD-ROM servers
- a wide variety of other service offerings. New
service ideas are being developed daily.
20Cost of Cable Modem Service
- In North America, cable operators are packaging
high-speed data services much like they do basic
cable television service - Typically charging 40 - 60 per month for an
Internet service package - Includes software, unlimited Internet access,
specialized content and rental of a cable modem
21Cost of Cable Modem Service
- At the low end of this pricing scale, a very
robust Internet service is available to consumers
for about the cost of a dial-up account with a
local Internet service provider and a second
telephone line - Even at 60 per month, cable is a far better
value than ISDN.
22"Telco-Return" Modems
- Not really a cable technology
- Used more often with Direct Satellite video
systems - Satellite down link is used for fast downstream
transmission - A telephone modem handles upstream communication
over the public telephone network.
23Support for Multiple PCs
- A cable modem can provide Intenet access to
multiple PCs, if they are connected via a local
area network (LAN) - Cable modems typically have an Ethernet output,
so they can connect to the LAN with a standard
Ethernet hub or router - Each PC must have an assigned IP address
- The cable ISP usually sells at a premium of
5-10 a month per PC - NAT (Network Address Translation) can allow
multiple PCs to "hide" behind a single IP Address