FierceWirelessFierceWirelessEuropeFierceDeveloperFierceMobileContentFierceBroadbandWirelessFierceVoIPFierceIPTVFierceTelecomFierceOnlineVideo

Free Newsletter

About | View Sample | Privacy

Verizon brings fiber to the user's fingertips

Tools

Verizon may be the most aggressive U.S. telco for delivering Fiber to the Premises (FTTP)-based services, but its ambitions don't stop at the residential customer. Now, the same technology being used to penetrate MDUs with FTTP in New York and other regions is now being leveraged to create a fiber-to-the-desktop (FTTD) service for commercial business users. This idea is not vaporware as Verizon Business previously launched a GPON-based FTTD service for the federal government in partnership with integrator SAIC.

In developing its Optical LAN Solutions (OLS) offering, Verizon did not have to look too far for the technology it would use. Similar to its MDU FTTP deployments, OLS also leverages a singlemode fiber and the same GPON gear (Optical Line Terminals, Optical Network Units and fiber distribution hubs) to establish a local area network that can deliver about 25 terahertz of capacity over 12 miles. Similar to the traditional Layer-2 services it already offers business customers OLS also supports a mix of voice, data and video service with flexible bandwidth capabilities.    

William Kight, Verizon group manager and network engineer says that all the work it has done serving residential users with GPON-based services has helped it make a case to develop an FTTD service for business users. "Because of the residential deployments, the cost of all the technology associated with GPON has come down to the point where we could use it in the enterprise," Kight says.

Among the many new innovations it pushed its vendors for in deploying FTTP to MDUs include less expensive ONUs, bend-insensitive fiber, and pre-connectorized fiber drops developed by vendors such as ADC.

For more:
- LightReading has this article
- Telecommunications also chronicled FTTD here

Related articles

Verizon takes a bite out of New York's MDU market
Tellabs supplies optical muscle to Army's IMOD program
Tellabs makes enterprise push with carrier partners

Bookmark and Share
Get Your FREE FierceTelecom Email Newsletter:

Comments (2) | Post a comment
More stories about Optical Network   Mdu   Fiber To The Premises   Fiber Distribution   Bandwidth Capabilities  

Comments

I agree with the previous statement. Verizon's own documentation references 25 THz multiple times like that's some kind of tangible capability a customer can use. Undersea optic network connections arent even close to that and they are trying to portray that kind of capability in a PON? PON technology is definately worth pursuing in the enterprise but who would go for Verizon to do it? They arent exactly known for being system integrators.

That's the second time I've read this 25 THz statement in two days -- over 12 miles, no less, and I think it's absolutely hilarious. One, despite the potential that it could be done, in the case of FiOS it just isn't true, leastwise not in a way that is meaningful to anyone. And two, who actually cares? Who would actually know how to even measure, much less use, such capacity? Too bad this sort of fluffery all too often occupies the page real estate that could have been devoted otherwise to telling the real story behind enterprise fiber's more-enabling, generative characteristics.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

More information about formatting options

To combat spam, please enter the code in the image.