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The evolution of cable television to interactive


communications service provider
By Jim Connors, JavaWorld.com, 10/01/96

The first foray into cable television appears to have taken place simultaneously in both Pennsylvania and Oregon
in the late 1940s and early 1950s. At the time, the fledgling television industry provided broadcast signals only to
the most populous (that is, economically advantageous) areas. For those regions that had poor TV reception either
because of obstructions or long distances from signal transmitters, cable television provided a workable solution.
Essentially, the early cable providers constructed large antennas on hilltops or buildings for improved TV
reception, and then strung coaxial cable from the antenna to the local community. Out of this environment the
acronym CATV, representing Community Antenna Television was born.

With the advent of satellite broadcasts to cable systems in the 1970s, cable operators were able to provide more
channels than were available over the traditional airwaves. Because of these value added capabilities, cable
television made significant inroads into markets where TV reception was already reasonably acceptable.
Additional services such as specialty channels and pay-per-view have brought the cable industry to where it is
today: approximately 63% of American households have cable TV, and cable service passes by about 95% of all
U.S. residences.

The cable industry is less than 50 years old, and yet with such a large market penetration, is already reasonably
mature. In searching for growth opportunities, the much ballyhooed National Information Infrastructure (NII) or
"Information Superhighway" provides an opening for cable television to build upon its extensive architecture and
experience to deliver the necessary features for the upcoming information age.

System architecture

Traditional cable television systems can be divided into five major sections. Figure 1.1 depicts graphically the
"tree and branch" architecture.

The headend is the center of CATV activity. It is here where external signals such as satellite, microwave, and
local TV station broadcasts are received from the various types of deployed antennas. Additionally, locally
produced and pre-recorded programs can be introduced into the mix. Ultimately it is the headend's responsibility
to process, combine, and assign a channel frequency to all signals destined for cable distribution.

A number of trunks, originally constructed out of large diameter coaxial cable, carry the signals from the headend
to a series of distribution points. Trunk cables share the same properties as do generic transmission lines with
regard to attenuation; in order to maintain adequate signal strength over long distances, amplifiers are required at
regular intervals. Much experience has shown that on average, amplifiers need to be spaced approximately 2,000

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feet apart. Only a finite number may be cascaded (approximately 30-40), as each amplifier introduces additional
noise and distortion to the signal. There are well known thresholds of signal distortion, above which, TV picture
quality will be affected.

Figure 1.1 - traditional cable television architecture

The smaller distribution or feeder cables branch out from the trunks and are responsible for serving local
neighborhoods. To avoid excessive attenuation and noise, feeder cable is also severely limited in length, since
usually a maximum of two amplifiers, called line extenders, are allowed per feeder. The statement that 95% of
households can be reached by cable services means that those homes are sufficiently close enough to a feeder
cable.

Feeder cables are tapped at periodic locations to furnish the familiar coaxial drop cables that enter directly into
the customer's premises. Drop cables too are limited in length to about 150 feet. Terminal equipment (consumer
electronics) is connected to the drop cable inside the home. Among the more common devices are televisions,
VCRs, set-top boxes, converters, descramblers, splitters, and cable modems.

Cable television advantages and disadvantages

Compared to the telephone industry, cable television systems do have, and have had for 50 years, a truly high-
bandwidth delivery system to the home. The simple reason for this fact is that television is, even by today's
standards, a high-bandwidth application. During the 1940's, when broadcast standards were being set by the
NTSC (National Television Systems Committee), technology and compromise dictated that each television
channel be assigned a 6-MHz portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. Since that time, much has improved to
increase utilization of the spectrum, but the standards still remain the same -- it would be very difficult to force all
consumers to replace their NTSC compliant equipment for devices based upon newer albeit better standards.

Figure 1.2 graphically represents the television spectrum allocation. The 6-MHz-wide channels were prudently
assigned to avoid inter channel interference. The remaining unallocated terrestrial spectrum is dedicated to a host
of other communication services.

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Figure 1.2 - television spectrum frequency allocation

Cable television, however does not utilize the terrestrial spectrum, but rather uses coaxial cable to broadcast its
signals. Coaxial cable has the ability not only to "emulate" over-the-air spectrum, but is designed such that its
sealed environment does not interfere with other signals. Consequently, it is possible for cable operators to safely
re-use previously allocated spectrum, or to deploy multiple cables, each of which contains its own separate
impervious spectra.

Regrettably, the original cable systems architecture was never really envisioned to be a general purpose two-way
communications medium. Its primary goal was simply to deliver high bandwidth video signals to residences. In
order to accommodate upstream communications, the existing cable plant must be upgraded.

Recent cable system developments

As is often the case in industry, the chief motivation for change revolves not necessarily around technology but
around business. In cable television's case, the late 1980's marked the time that it made business sense to begin
replacing the coaxial cable distribution plant with fiber optics. Since signals transmitted by optical fiber can be
carried for significantly longer distances, fewer amplifiers are needed. This results in fewer points of failure,
lower maintenance costs, and better signal quality.

Fiber optics also facilitate a larger broadcast spectrum and bi-directional communications. Recall that Figure 1.2
does specify a portion of the spectrum for upstream purposes. Two-way amplifiers can be incorporated into the
cable distribution plant such that any signals falling into the range of downstream frequencies can be amplified
downstream, while those that fit into the upstream range, can be amplified in the opposite direction.

A current state-of-the-art cable architecture is a hybrid fiber/coax (HFC) combination. Trunk cables can be
upgraded to fiber optics without replacing existing feeder and drop lines. As cable franchises run fiber deeper into
their network, they are capable of serving areas with custom programming and services tailored to individual
neighborhoods. These service areas are usually in the range of 500 to 2,000 subscribers.11

Cablevision's Access Plaza

In the fall of 1995, Cablevision introduced a pilot program called Access Plaza and made it available to a subset
of its Long Island subscribers. Access Plaza is a combination of hardware and software that lets users surf the
Internet, get interactive news, and do home banking all through the coaxial drop cable that enters their homes.
Although still in its early stages, it is Cablevision's plan to provide this service and perhaps additional ones for a
flat monthly fee.

Cable modems

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The key piece of terminal equipment that enables such access is the cable modem. Figure 1.3(a) shows how a
generic cable modem might be incorporated into an existing home drop cable, and connected to a general-purpose
computer. Figure 1.3(b) represents the implementation that was provided at the author's residence. Specifically,
Cablevision installed a second drop cable, not for the reason that the data network is on a separate distinct
distribution wire, but because they wanted to ensure sufficient signal strength to the cable modem. It is no
mystery that cable TV subscribers will split the incoming signal several times to accommodate the various video
devices, legal and illegal, in their homes. Each split contributes to a well-known reduction in signal power and
quality.

Figure 1.3(a) - Generic cable modem connection. Figure 1.3(b) - Cablevision implementation

The modem supplied by Cablevision is a Zenith HomeWorks model. The modem itself contains two physical
connectors. One end is used to join the modem to the coaxial drop cable, the other is a proprietary high-speed
interface including an IBM PC ISA card which must be installed into an IBM compatible personal computer.
Already limiting hardware to IBM PC compatibles, network device drivers are available only for the MS-
Windows 3.1 and 3.11 operating systems, further restricting choice. Clearly, the implementation does not take an
open systems approach, but future-generation cable modems, discussed later, will address this shortcoming and
much more. Cablevision's choice of the Zenith HomeWorks modem was a function of price and availability. At
roughly 00, the HomeWorks model is the most affordable, and one of the few that is available in quantity.

It is important to stress that distribution and support channels for cable modems will not, for the foreseeable
future, be comparable to those for consumer electronics and software. As an example, the author attempted to get
detailed information on the Zenith HomeWorks modem in the hopes of writing a device driver for the Solaris x86
operating system. Not only was the author refused such information, he was treated rather rudely for even
inquiring!

The network details

In constructing a hybrid fiber/coax architecture, Cablevision uses the term "node" to refer to the endpoint of fiber
connectivity within their infrastructure. Each node is capable of custom services, which, in data communications
parlance means that it can have its own independent network. Currently, there are approximately 400 nodes on
Long Island, each of which supports, on average, about 500 subscribers. Only a small number of these nodes are
part of the Access Plaza pilot, and each active node is assigned its own separate subnet.

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The hardware and datalink layer of communications for Access Plaza is implemented using a "modified Ethernet"
similar to what one is accustomed to with local area networks, but suited to deal with transmitting packets over
much longer distances than traditional LANs. Network-layer communications are TCP/IP based where each
remote host currently receives its own dedicated class B IP address. All hosts are part of the cvnet.com domain,
but are not assigned character host names within that domain. As a result the only real way of locating any node
within the Access Plaza network is by its IP address.

Like many other organizations, Cablevision is facing an IP address shortage. Only one class B network is
allocated for the entire Access Plaza program, limiting the maximum number of hosts to 64K. In its aim to
alleviate this problem, Cablevision is investigating potential solutions like DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol) to temporarily lease IP addresses to hosts only for the duration of their connect time on the network.
The imminent IPNG (Internet Protocol Next Generation) standard, which dramatically increases the number of
available IP addresses, would also help ease many of the problems IP network administrators have today.

Referring back to Figure 1.2, upstream and downstream communications must be assigned frequencies that do
not interfere with other channels. Accordingly, the author has been allotted a transmit, or upstream, frequency of
19.25 MHz, fitting into the portion of spectrum allocated for upstream channels. The receive, or downstream,
band is centered at 649.25 MHz, extending well beyond the hyperband TV channels. 649.25 MHz is, incidentally,
indicative of a state-of-the-art underpinning, since older cable plants could not effectively support signals at such
high frequencies.

Performance

Individual performance within the cable data network is a function of many variables. Among the most important
are bandwidth of the upstream and downstream frequencies, baud rate efficiency of the cable modem and, of
course, the amount of simultaneous usage on the network.

Cablevision has chosen transmit and receive bands of 1.5 MHz, effectively dividing a traditional 6 MHz TV
channel into 4 separate data slices. As will be seen later, cable modem vendors are quoting a wide range of
performance numbers, each based upon how efficiently they can utilize the allocated bandwidth to send and
receive data. For the Zenith HomeWorks modem, the baud efficiency is 1:3, meaning that for every 3 cycles, 1 bit
of information can be extracted. The Zenith modem is rated as having a maximum data rate of 500 Kbps.

Cablevision says its been able to demonstrate data rates as high as a respectable 330 kbps. Personal tests have
shown that it is possible to transfer files via FTP at a rate of 20 kilobytes per second. Taking into consideration
the overhead associated with FTP and underlying protocols, it is not unreasonable to estimate that throughput for
such an operation is 200 Kbps. These rates all fall within an order of magnitude and represent a substantial
increase over any traditional dialup telephone data access. All this can be achieved without even missing that all
important call from your dentist!

In terms of performance, a 500 Kbps rate promises to be just the tip of the iceberg; the newer generation of cable
modems will be much more capable. As modulation schemes evolve, baud efficiency is improving considerably.
Some vendors are already claiming efficiencies of 10:1, and there are modems nearing availability that quote
downstream data rates of 27 Mbps. Table 1.1 represents a broadband enthusiast's compilation of cable modems
currently being marketed.

Table 1.1 - Cable modems


Upstream Forecasted
Manufacturer Downstreamdata rate Modem
data rate availability
Zenith 500 Kbps 500 Kbps now HomeWorks
Zenith 4 Mbps 4 Mbps now HomeWorksUniversal
LanCity/Digital 10 Mbps 10 Mbps now ChannelWorks

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Com21 30 Mbps 2 Mbps Early '96 ComPort


GeneralInstrument 27 Mbps 1.5 Mbps Early '96 PcLinx
Hewlett Packard 30 Mbps 15 Mbps Mid '96 QuickBurst
Scientific Atlanta 27 Mbps 1.5 Mbps Late '96 ???
Nortel 27 Mbps 2 Mbps Late '96 DataPort
Motorola 10 Mbps 768 Kbps March '96 CyberSufr
Intel 27 Mbps 96 Kbps Mid-Late '96 CablePort
Hybrid Networks 10 Mbps 512 Kbps Mid-Late '96 Remote Link Adapter 211
Pioneer ??? ??? Late '96 ???

(From Bob's Cable Modems, 1994, pp. 1-6)

Furthermore, newer modems will opt for standard open interfaces rather than their closed proprietary
predecessors. As an example, Zentih's updated model, called the HomeWorks Universal cable modem, uses a
more desirable, protocol independent Ethernet interface rated at 4 Mbps.

Of course, total network performance is only as fast as your slowest link. In the case of Access Plaza, Cablevision
has two T1 connections to the Internet rated at 1.544 Mbps each. This may, for the time being, be adequate for
600 users, but as more hosts come online, and as applications are developed to require more bandwidth, it is
expected that those pipes to the Internet must widen. Currently, Cablevision has addressed connectivity within its
metropolitan New York subscribing area by installing a fiber backbone based upon OC3, OC12 and, in some
cases, OC48 standards capable of sustaining data rates of 155 Mbps, 622 Mbps, and 2.4 Gbps respectively.

Software

Computer Associates is responsible for contributing software to the Access Plaza partnership. Frankly, their
package is at best a hodge-podge integration of components that let users access online services like Prodigy,
Compuserve, America On-line, and Netscape. Additionally, subscribers can receive news clips from the local
cable TV station, and can initiate online banking transactions with one of the prominent regional banks.

In the MS-DOS/Windows framework, low-level network connectivity is accomplished by loading an ODI (Open
Data-link Interface) compliant device driver for the HomeWorks modem interface card. In order to convert
packets to and from TCP/IP, another driver, known as a shim, must be stacked on top of the ODI module. Both
components appear to be written by a third party.

User applications communicate over the network by interfacing with a standard high-level WINSOCK
dynamically linked library. The public domain version of WINSOCK.DLL, implemented by Trumpet, combined
with the initial ODI driver yielded unacceptably poor performance and reliability.

It was not until the Access Plaza support organization shipped a different version of the Zenith device driver that
the situation actually improved. The newer version, based upon an alternative driver specification called NDIS,
enables one to use any of a host of off-the-shelf Windows network software packages. For obvious reasons (see
bio below), the author chose to load SunSoft's PC-NFSpro software and scrap the Access Plaza network stack.
Upon doing so, performance and reliability increased dramatically. Moreover, aside from furnishing a superior
WINSOCK.DLL, PC-NFSpro also comes bundled with previously unavailable Internet applications like FTP and
telnet.

Future services

Access Plaza still lacks some of the features that Internet users have grown accustomed to. Essential services like

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e-mail and news are only now being tested by an even smaller subset of the 600 pilot homes.

By limiting device driver availability to Microsoft Windows, and not assigning character hostnames to user
machines, it becomes impractical, if not impossible, for subscribers to create their own Web servers. This is
somewhat intentional on Cablevision's part, for they fear allowing one residence to hog an entire communities'
network bandwidth. It is hoped that in the future such capabilities would be available at perhaps an additional
cost to the customer.

Cablevision has already taken advantage of its upgraded network by increasing its number of channels to over 60
and, at the same time, significantly improving picture quality. Furthermore, they have announced that they will
soon provide other communications services like telephone over the cable system.

TCI's @HOME Network

Tele-Communications Inc. and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers have combined to create @HOME, a company
that will provide real-time multimedia news, entertainment, access to the Internet, and other services via cable
systems.

This service is of particular interest to Sun Microsystems for a number of reasons. Firstly, the initial deployment
of @HOME is slated to begin in 1996, starting in Sunnyvale, California. Parts of Colorado fall under TCI's
domain too, and also appears to be a potential pilot site. The estimated monthly charge for basic services is
expected to be in the range of 0 to 0.

Secondly, the principals of @HOME are well-known in the Sun community. Former Sun board member William
Randolph Hearst III is founding CEO of @HOME, while current Sun board member John Doerr is also on the
board of directors for @HOME.

The @HOME network will make its services available to the widest possible number of users and content
providers by running on platforms like Windows, Windows 95, MacOS, and Unix. All this will be accomplished
via 10-Base-T Ethernet cable modems.

@HOME will operate its own high-speed backbone connecting the various supported geographic areas, and
having multiple Internet points of presence (POPs). Users are connected to regional headend servers over hybrid
fiber/coax cable.

About the author

Jim Connors is a SunSoft Eastern Area Systems Engineer.

All contents copyright 1995-2010 Java World, Inc. http://www.javaworld.com

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