New Electronics - For Electronic design engineers
   
Search :   Search Help    login

Ground breaking 09/11/2007
 
Residential gateways, Broadband access technologies , Passive optical networking (PON) , Fibre to the home (FTTH) The deployment of newer broadband access technologies is causing a more rapid development of residential gateways.
“As broadband access has moved from one generation to the next, the evolution of the residential gateway has accelerated,” said Pranay Aiya, Conexant Systems’ director of marketing for ADSL CO, PON and SDSL. Whereas digital subscriber line (dsl) ics took a decade to move from simple modems to full residential gateways, newer passive optical networking (PON) ics have taken two years to go from supporting data access and voice to a residential gateway architecture that also includes wireless networking.
Yet, despite the challenge of developing gateway ics in shorter time frames, chip makers welcome the opportunity the residential gateway market presents. “[Broadband] semiconductor companies realise that, if they want to make money, the residential gateway chipset has the most potential,” said Aileen Arcilla, a senior analyst for networking, broadband and storage systems ics at IDC.
A residential – or home – gateway bridges the broadband network to the digital home. The residential gateway core ic – which may or may not include broadband modem functionality on chip – supports routing, voice and video, as well as such interfaces as Ethernet and WiFi. As a result, a gateway ic commands a higher selling price than dsl modem chips – $30 compared to less than $10 – and its pricing is far more stable.
Telecom operators, such as British Telecom and France Telecom’s Orange, are keen proponents of residential gateways. Orange, for example, had installed more than 5.7million Livebox home gateways by the end of September 2007. Operators can offer subscribers bundled services, such as voice, video and high speed internet, promising increased revenues.
 
Author
Roy Rubenstein
 
 
Download Articles
 
 Ground breaking.pdf
 
This material is protected by Findlay Publications copyright 2008.
See Terms and Conditions.
One-off usage is permitted but bulk copying is not.
For multiple copies contact the sales team.
 
Supporting Information
 
 http://www.conexant.com/
 
 http://www.idc.com/
 
 http://www.ikanos.com/
 
Email this article
 
Bookmark this article using:
 
Del.icio.us digg reddit Facebook StumbleUpon
 
News Item
Download Articles
 
 Ground breaking.pdf
 
 
News Item
Linked Companies
 
 Conexant Systems UK Ltd
 
 IDC
 
 
News Item
Similar News Articles
 
  ST signs up with MIT’s MTL group
 
  Micrel, Zilog sign development deal
 
  ECIT to house secure IT centre
 
  Micro controls muscle bike
 
  Nehalem processor is ‘fastest yet’
 
 
News Item
Similar Technology Articles
 
  Small is beautiful
 
  Communications systems go!
 
  Multicore magic
 
  Boosting bandwidth
 
  Fit for purpose