Log In   |  Register Free Newsletter Subscription
Skip navigation
Zibb
Subscribe to Multichannel News
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Taking IPTV for a Spin

Comcast Test of CableLabs Spec to Include Video

By Todd Spangler -- Multichannel News, 5/6/2007 8:00:00 PM

When Comcast later this year starts kicking the tires on a high-speed cable-modem technology, it will also experiment with a new way of driving TV programming over its networks: using Internet Protocol.

At the company's biennial investor conference last week (May 1), Comcast chief technology officer Tony Werner said the operator expects to test equipment based on CableLabs' Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification 3.0 later this year.

“The technology should be available so we can deploy [DOCSIS 3.0] where and when we want to next year, if there are business cases to do it,” he said.

Comcast CEO Brian Roberts is high on the technology. On the company's first-quarter earnings call last month, he noted that he plans to demonstrate on stage at The Cable Show “where we're going as an industry” on DOCSIS 3.0, which he said will “turbo-charge today's experience into a super broadband experience.”

DOCSIS 3.0, the latest iteration of cable's data-networking standard, provides the ability to virtually glue together multiple 6-Megahertz channels to act as if they were a single channel. These bonded channels will allow the next generation of cable-modem equipment to provide downstream speeds up to 100 Megabits per second and even higher.

“Everybody understands it allows us to increase our speed fairly substantially,” Werner said.

Comcast will also check to see how effectively those big pipes can deliver video.

In one of Comcast's DOCSIS 3.0 trials, the operator will provide voice, video and data over a single, high-bandwidth IP connection, according to a presentation by Comcast fellow Mark Francisco at CableLabs' winter technology conference in March.

This converged-services trial, in a system that serves 50,000 homes passed, will include an IP video headend and DOCSIS 3.0 set-top boxes built to the operator's Residential Network Gateway (RNG) requirements, Francisco said, according to an industry consultant who was in attendance. RNG is Comcast's effort to standardize set-top hardware platforms. The IP-video headend will be connected to a 10 Gigabit-per-second backhaul link.

The test bed will also include other network-connected devices, such as Sling Media's SlingBox, dual-mode Wi-Fi/cellphones and mobile handsets capable of playing video, according to Francisco's presentation.

Comcast declined to provide more information about the IPTV trial.

RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email
Talkback
Reed Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Related Resources

Advertisement

Related Microsite Content

Related Links

More Content
  • Voices
  • Photos
  • Podcasts

Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

VIEW ALL VOICES RSS
HALL OF FAME WELCOME

2009 CABLE HALL OF FAME

Some snapshots from the 2009 Cable Hall of Fame induction, part of Cable Connection-Fall in Denver on Oct. 27.
HIGH ACHIEVER

2009 ACC FORUM

The Association of Cable Communicators headed west from Washington, D.C., to Denver as its 2009 Forum and Beacon Awards ceremony became part of Cable Connections-Fall festivities.
Curtain Rises

CTAM SUMMIT: DAY ONE

Snapshots from day one of CTAM Summit '09 in Denver. Photos by John Staley.

Fall 2009 Hispanic Guide
Advertisement
Multichannel Subscription
NEWSLETTERS
Multichannel Newswire
HD Update
Cable Technology
VOD Newsletter
Hispanic TV Update
HD Programming
Multicultural Newsletter
B&C NewsCentral
Television Careers



Please read our Privacy Policy

About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   Subscription   |   Affiliate Links   |   RSS
© 2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites