Huawei has launched their Gigabit Passive Optical Network (GPON) solution for the first time in South Africa at the Huawei GPON Summit, held in Melrose Arch, Johannesburg.
The demand for ubiquitous broadband has increased globally due to the manner in which people have started using the internet. The multiple uses ranging from accessing information to streaming movies requires reliable and fast bandwidth.
Social networking sites and data sharing services operate on the fundamentals of speedy reaction allowing consumers to interact and collaborate instantly. Bringing optical fibre to every home is the definitive response to such demands for greater bandwidth. The GPON solution is the answer to a multitude of connection needs.
A passive optical network (PON) is a system that brings optical fibre cabling and signals all or most of the way to the end user. GPON is the type of PON most widely deployed in today’s fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) networks in new installations and is considered suitable for consumer broadband services for the next five to 10 years.
GPON offers increased bandwidth capabilities as well as triple-play services (Internet access, voice over Internet protocol (VoIP), and digital TV) on a single fibre optic line to your home or office.
A standard GPON fibre line can be split to support 128 users and can reach distances of up to 20km, connecting directly to residential households and office premises. Copper infrastructure can only reach up to 100m at a time, supports low bandwidth and is susceptible to interference.
GPON was developed by the ITU-T (The Telecommunication Standardization Sector of the International Telecommunications Union) to be an industry-wide interoperable standard. This means that it can operate with equipment from different vendors, thus allowing for compatibility with networks which are already deployed. It allows service providers to add to existing networks, instead of replacing the entire infrastructure.
This factor is important for driving down equipment costs and enables service providers to deliver GPON services profitably to their subscribers.
“GPON will enhance network enablement as it allows users to access more services and allow service providers to offer more services to the users. It is one of the simplest infrastructures within the industry to manage and maintain, as it consists of a single shared optical fibre that can support multiple users through the use of inexpensive passive optical splitters. Since there is no active equipment in the network, it does not get affected by electromagnetic interference or lightning,” says Terrance Sema, access network solutions executive of Huawei Carrier Business Group for the Eastern and Southern Africa region.
With over 30 years of experience in the ICT industry and with products serving 45 of the top 50 global telecom operators, Huawei is recognized as one of the top providers in the world for GPON.
“GPON will bring about revolutionary changes to the broadband environment in South Africa. As more and more consumers gain direct access to triple-play services in their homes, it will drive the demand of internet as a utility-based resource” says Peter Geldenhuys, Futurist and Extra-ordinary Lecturer in Technology Strategy of North-West University.
“Simultaneously, GPON will create massive shifts in business models in the digital industry. Information push strategies will change dramatically as companies integrate and tailor opportunities to adapt,” concludes Geldenhuys.