FiberVista is a fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) or fiber-to-the-curb (FTTC) system that provides more bandwidth for emerging broadband services, such as Internet data, than existing deployed residential systems, while tapping predictable revenue streams from telephony and analog- and digital-video broadcast television service. At the same time, FiberVista minimizes development costs by reusing existing or emerging technology from other systems, such as cable modems and low-cost residential optical transceivers. It also allows for incremental, “pay-as-you-grow” provisioning of capacity. Like cable-television (CATV) hybrid fiber-coax (HFC) networks, FiberVista uses subcarrier multiplexing to offer a flexible mix of services. The system is superior to HFC in that it offers more total bandwidth, both upstream and downstream, which can be shared among fewer homes. By limiting the coax plant to a small passive run in FTTC, or eliminating it altogether in FTTH, FiberVista minimizes the most unreliable and maintenance-intensive portion of the HFC network. Furthermore, it utilizes new technologies, such as high-power erbium-doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs), coarse wavelength division multiplexing (CWDM), and passive optical networks (PONs), to make the extension of optical fiber deep into the network practical. In this paper, we describe the FiberVista network architecture, potential upgrade scenarios, and experimental system demonstrations.
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