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Dr Nguyen Duc, Principal, EagleComms Advisory presented "Gigabit Networks: Learning from developments of GIG Networks and GIG Services" at Connected Australia 2013. This conference is designed to help organisiations harness the opportunities that super-fast broadband will create, and explores the future impact of the NBN through the healthcare, education and consumer industries. For more information, please visit the conference website: http://www.connectedaustralia.com.au/2013
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Gigabit Networks Learning from Developments of GIG Networks and GIG Services
Dr Nguyen Duc Principal – EagleComms Advisory
Melbourne, Australia
Informa Connected Australia, Sydney, 15-16 October 2013
How many people have 10 Mbps?
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 2
10 Mbps
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
How many people have 100 Mbps?
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 3
100 Mbps
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
How many people have 1,000 Mbps or 1 Gbps or 1 GIG?
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 4
1,000 Mbps
1 Gbps or 1 GIG
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
Think Capacity. Think Capability.
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 5
10 Mbps
100 Mbps
1,000 Mbps
1 Gbps or 1 GIG
‘Access Pipes’
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
What does 1-GIG Pipe mean?
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 6
Web will be faster. High-Definition Images will be sharper.
Downloading & Uploading will be superfast.
• In ONE minute: Theoretically, 7.5 GB DVD, or 2,500 songs, or 1,500 photos, or 375 chest X-rays.
• Full HD movie within FOUR minutes. Song (MP3): 3MB | Photo: 5MB | X-ray: 20MB | Movie (Full HD 1080p): 25GB
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 7
What?
Why?
Where?
How?
Examples
Learning
GIG Networks
GIG Networks
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 8
Broadband Access Networks (‘Access Pipes’) capable of supporting digital transmission at peak speeds of up to 1 Gbps (1 GIG), either downstream or upstream, or both, for residential and small business users.
Wireline or Fixed-Line Access.
Wireless Access. Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
GIG Networks Why? Where? How?
Government policy (e.g. South Korea).
Infrastructure competition (e.g. Hong Kong, Japan).
Community initiatives (e.g. UK/Europe, USA).
Innovative use of utility resources (e.g. USA).
New business models (e.g. USA, Canada).
Opportunities for innovation (e.g. USA).
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 9
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
GIG Networks – Examples
Gigabit Internet Project (South Korea).
HKBN (Hong Kong).
B4RN – Broadband for the Rural North (UK).
Chattanooga Gig City™ EPB Fiber (USA).
Google Fiber (USA).
US Ignite Program (USA).
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 10
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
South Korea
SK has world’s highest average measured connection speed of 14.2 Mbps. (Akamai,
Quarter 1, 2013). [Peak speed: 44.8 Mbps]
SK has world’s second highest combined FTTH-FTTB household penetration of 69% in Dec 2012. (IDATE for FTTH Council Europe, Feb 2013)
SK has a strong government policy focus on information and communications technology (ICT).
FTTH: Fibre-to-the-Home. FTTB: Fibre-to-the-Building
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 11
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
South Korea’s Gigabit Project
Initiated in 2009 by SK Government, in partnership with industry (including KT Corporation, SK Broadband, LG U+):
Gigabit Internet service used by 8,300 households in 10 cities in 2012. Target: 90% nationwide Gigabit coverage by 2017. (ITU BB Report, Sept 2013)
Each customer pays about 30,000 KR wons a month (approx. AUD30, NZD34, USD28, GBP17).
“We needed to be prepared for things like 3-D TV, IPTV, high-definition multimedia, gaming and videoconferencing, ultra-HD (4K) TV, cloud computing.” (SK official, Feb 2011)
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 12
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
Hong Kong
HK has world’s highest average peak connection speed of 63.6 Mbps. (Akamai,
Quarter 1, 2013). [Average speed: 10.9 Mbps]
HK has world’s third highest combined FTTH-FTTB household penetration of 56% in Dec 2012. (IDATE for FTTH Council Europe, Feb 2013)
HK is a fierce infrastructure-based broadband competitive market, in particular between HKBN and PCCW-HKT.
FTTH: Fibre-to-the-Home. FTTB: Fibre-to-the-Building
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 13
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
HKBN 1-GIG FTTH Service
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 14
Hong Kong Demographic Stats (2013)
Population: 7.2 million.
Land Area: 1,054 square kms.
Pop Density: 6,830 persons/square km. (world’s 4th highest density)
Urbanisation: 100%.
Hong Kong Broadband Network launched Hong Kong’s first 1-GIG symmetrical FTTH services in Sept 2010 for HKD199 a month (approx. AUD27, NZD31, USD26, GBP16).
HKBN fibre network covers over 2 million residential homes. (Feb 2013)
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
B4RN
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 15
B4RN: Broadband for the Rural North.
UK’s first community-powered broadband network in rural Lancashire, offering 1-GIG symmetrical FTTH services (Jan 2013).
Community-owned and managed.
Share-based investment opportunity open to all, gained through money or labour.
Source: B4RN, 2013 Photos: Recombu, 2012
B4RN 1-GIG FTTH Service
Monthly Fee: GBP30 (approx. AUD52, NZD59, USD49, EUR36).
Connection Fee: GBP150 (approx. AUD261, NZD295, USD244, EUR179).
Customers provided with a standard 4-port Gigabit switch and 1-hour battery backup for Voice-over-IP (VoIP) telephone services.
B4RN network uses point-to-point FTTH architecture, with every customer premises receiving a two-fibre cable connected back to their village node.
NOTE: UK Connection Speeds: 7.9 Mbps (Average); 47.9 Mbps (Peak)
Source: Akamai, Quarter 1, 2013
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 16
Chattanooga Gig City™
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 17
Chattanooga’s EPB Fiber (Tennessee): First municipal broadband network in the USA to offer 1-GIG symmetrical FTTP services in Sept 2010.
FTTP services provided over the EPB Fiber’s Smart Grid, covering about 170,000 homes and businesses (over 600 sq. miles, or about 1,600 sq. kms).
Sept 2013: About 56,000 Internet residential and business customers. (NOTE: Only 34 1-GIG customers, including 8 residential, in Aug 2013).
1-GIG Internet Monthly Fee: USD300 (approx.
AUD321, NZD364, GBP184).
EPB: Electric Power Board.
FTTP: Fiber-to-the-Premises.
Source: EPB Fiber, Oct 2013
EPB slashes GIG Internet price
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 18
In Oct 2013, Chattanooga’s EPB Fiber upgraded Internet services of all its residential customers.
100 and 250 Mbps automatically increased to 1,000 Mbps (1 GIG) for USD70 per month. (reduced from USD300). Potentially, 3,000 GIG residential customers, after upgrades.
50 Mbps automatically increased to 100 Mbps for (unchanged) USD58 per month.
Only 100 Mbps and 1,000 Mbps offered from October 2013.
USD70 = AUD75, NZD85, GBP43, EUR52 (approx.)
USD58 = AUD62, NZD70, GBP36, EUR43 (approx.)
Source: EPB Fiber, Oct 2013
Google Fiber
BACKGROUND & MOTIVATION:
In early 2009, the US Congress directed the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to develop a National Broadband Plan (NBP) to ensure every American has “access to broadband capability”.
A small team at Google was preparing to provide comments to the FCC.
Google management said: “Why whine to the Government? If this is important, we should do it ourselves.” So a Google Fiber team was formed in June 2009. (Source: Google, Feb 2013)
NOTE: US Connection Speeds: 8.6 Mbps (Average); 36.6 Mbps (Peak)
Source: Akamai, Quarter 1, 2013
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 19
Google Fiber RFI
In February 2010, Google announced plans to build ‘Google Fiber’ networks – Gigabit Fiber-to-the-Home (FTTH) broadband networks.
Google initiated a Request for Information (RFI) to see if any communities of 50,000 to 500,000 people would be interested in partnering with the firm in the deployment of Google Fiber networks.
Nearly 1,100 communities responded!
Kansas City, Kansas was selected. (March 2011)
Kansas City, Missouri was selected. (May 2011)
Kansas City pop: 611,000 people. (2012)
Kansas side: 147,000 people.
Missouri side: 464,000 people.
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 20
Source: Google Fiber, 2011
Google ‘Fiberhood’ Qualification
Google used social community drives to aggregate user demand. $10 pre-registration fee.
Neighbourhood ‘Rallies’ were run to determine where demand for Google Fiber is.
Deployment based on where threshold demand targets were met: ‘Fiberhood’ qualification!
Schools, libraries, and public safety in qualified areas (Fiberhoods) connected at a GIG for free.
Google Fiber residential subscribers connected ‘in waves’, and not one at a time.
Google Fiber deployment costs also reduced with special support from partnership city councils.
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 21
Source: Google Fiber, Sept 2012
Google ‘Fiberhood’ Qualification
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 22
180 Qualified ‘Fiberhoods’ in Kansas City Source: Google Fiber, Sept 2012
Google Fiber
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 23
Source: Google Fiber, Nov 2012
Google ‘Fiberhood’ Deployment
Hanover Heights in Kansas City, Kansas: First Fiberhood to be connected to Google Fiber (November 2012).
Additional surrounding areas around Kansas City, Kansas and Missouri subsequently selected and included in the Google ‘Fiberhood’ deployment program.
In April 2013, two other cities selected for Google Fiber deployments:
Austin, Texas (from mid 2014). Population: 843,000 (2012).
Provo, Utah (from Oct 2013). Population: 116,000 (2012).
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 24
Source: GigaOM, 2013 Source: Provo Daily Herald, 2013
Google Fiber 1-GIG Speed Test
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 25
[Mike D.] posted this to Twitter during the first few minutes that Google Fiber went live in his Kansas City home.
Source: Ars Technica, Nov 2012
DOWNLOAD UPLOAD
Google Services in Kansas City
Three Google Fiber services offered in Kansas City:
Gigabit Internet + TV: US$120 per month. US$300 construction fee waived.
Gigabit Internet: US$70 per month. US$300 construction fee waived.
Free Internet: US$0 per month. US$300 construction fee (one time, or US$25 per month for 12 months).
Approx. Conversion (2 Oct 2013):
USD120 = AUD128; NZD145; GBP74; EUR88.
USD70 = AUD75; NZD85; GBP43; EUR52.
USD300 = AUD321; NZD364; GBP185; EUR221.
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 26
Source: Google Fiber, Nov 2012
Google Gigabit Internet + TV
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 27
Up to 1 Gbps download & upload. Full channel TV line-up. 2-year contract. No data caps. HDTV Box. Network Box. 2-TB Storage Box. Nexus 7 Tablet.
1TB of Cloud Storage across Gmail, Drive and G+ Photos.
US$120 per month.
Source: Google Fiber, Oct 2013
Google Gigabit Internet
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 28
Up to 1 Gbps download & upload. 1-year contract. No data caps. Network Box. 1TB of Cloud Storage across Gmail, Drive and G+ Photos.
US$70 per month.
Source: Google Fiber, Oct 2013
Google Free Internet
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 29
Up to 5 Mbps download & 1 Mbps upload. Free service guaranteed for at least 7 years. No data caps. Network Box.
US$300 construction fee (one time, or US$25 per month for 12 months).
Source: Google Fiber, Oct 2013
Partnership
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 30
A non-profit public-private partnership announced at the White House in June 2012.
“US Ignite Partnership is an initiative to promote US leadership in developing applications and services for ultra-fast broadband and software-defined networks. It will foster the creation of novel applications and digital experiences that will transform healthcare, education and job skills training, public safety, energy, and advanced manufacturing.”
US Ignite will leverage the resources of government, research institutions, foundations, and industry to foster an innovation ecosystem for development of gigabit applications and services.
NOTE: NICTA (National ICT Australia Ltd) is a partner of the US Ignite initiative.
Source: US Ignite, June 2012
Gigabit Explorer Challenge
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 31
In Sept 2013, US Ignite and Google Fiber announced they will jointly host ‘Gigabit Explorer Challenge’ at Google’s Fiber Space in Kansas City, Missouri on November 1-3, 2013.
Theme: What would you do with a Gigabit?
Purpose: Looking for US developers to build and test Gigabit Applications.
For example, Gigabit Applications that:
Are incredibly and realistically responsive, with no latency or delay.
Allow you to touch, move, and control things with your hands, your eyes, or your body language.
Enable real-time collaboration in a natural way.
Provide immediate results from massive computations from big data
Is not limited by bandwidth. Source: US Ignite, Sept 2013
And what about Australia and New Zealand?
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 32
National Broadband Network Ultra-Fast Broadband
(NBN) (UFB)
4.7 Mbps (AU) Average Measured Connection Speeds 4.4 Mbps (NZ)
26.3 Mbps (AU) Average Peak Connection Speeds 20.2 Mbps (NZ)
Source: Akamai, Quarter 1, 2013
Australian NBN
In April 2013, NBN Co announced it will be offering 1-GIG Wholesale FTTP services in December 2013.
1,000 Mbps download / 400 Mbps upload.
Wholesale access price: A$150 per month.
New Coalition Govt’s NBN Policy: (Sept. 2013)
Fibre-to-the-Node (FTTN): 71% pop.
Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP): 22% pop.
Fixed Wireless & Satellites: 7% pop.
Approx. Conversion (2 Oct 2013):
AUD150 = USD140; NZD170; GBP86; EUR103.
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 33
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
New Zealand UFB
In September 2013, Chorus announced it will launch 1-GIG FTTH community competition on NZ Labour Day (Oct 28).
The winning community ‘Gigatown’, within Chorus’ Ultra-Fast Fibre (UFB) deployment areas, will be announced in early 2015.
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 34
Source: Chorus, Sept 2013
GIG Networks & GIG Services Summary
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 35
Gigabit Networks - Summary
Key Drivers for GIG Network Deployments:
Government telecommunications policies and regulations at Federal, State and Local levels.
Infrastructure competition.
Geo-demographic environment.
Community initiatives and drives.
Innovative use of utility resources.
New business initiatives. New business models.
‘Fiberhood’ qualification deployment.
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 36
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
Gigabit Services - Summary
Still in early days. Therefore, lots of opportunities to innovate and develop 1-GIG services and applications.
In the meantime, GIG users can enjoy:
Faster web.
Sharper high-definition images. Smoother video streaming.
Superfast downloads and uploads. Improved productivity.
Sharing the same GIG pipe with other users, with minimal concern about capacity, speed or delay issues.
Applications:
High-definition real-time medical images.
Immersive real-time communications.
High-speed cloud computing.
Gigabit applications from ‘Gigabit Explorer Challenge’.
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 37
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
Gigabit Pricing - Summary
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 38
COUNTRY
GIG NETWORK
MONTHLY FEE
(Local Currency)
MONTHLY FEE (Approx. USD)
MONTHLY FEE (Approx. AUD)
Hong Kong HKBN HKD200 USD26 AUD27
South Korea Gigabit Project KRW30,000 USD28 AUD30
UK B4RN GBP30 USD49 AUD52
USA Google Fiber (Kansas City)
USD70 USD70 AUD75
USA Chattanooga
Gig City™ EPB Fiber
USD70 USD70 AUD75
Australia NBN
(Dec 2013) AUD150
(wholesale) USD140
(wholesale) AUD150
(wholesale)
New Zealand Chorus UFB
(2015) TBA
(wholesale) TBA
(wholesale) TBA
(wholesale)
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
Think Capacity. Think Capability.
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 39
10 Mbps
100 Mbps
1,000 Mbps
1 Gbps or 1 GIG
‘Access Pipes’
Source: Nguyen Duc, Oct 2013
Acknowledgements
The author would like to thank the organisations
and people who kindly share their images on the
net that are used in this presentation.
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 40
Gigabit Networks Learning from Developments of GIG Networks and GIG Services
Dr Nguyen Duc Principal – EagleComms Advisory
Melbourne, Australia
Informa Connected Australia, Sydney, 15-16 October 2013
Provo City’s Promo Video “Google Fiber versus Broadband”
16 October 2013 © 2013 Dr Nguyen Duc – EagleComms Advisory 42
Provo City’s Promo Video “Google Fiber versus Broadband” (1:20 min)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9QU5lHzgvK0&feature=player_embedded
Source: Provo City, Utah, Oct 2013