From the perspective of a large carrier, spectrum is an operational nightmare. 
At a former $dayjob it was an “offering” in the sense that we had deployed it, 
told customers we offered it but wouldn’t actually deploy it anymore. 

Logistically there are a lot of potential points of failure once you got beyond 
the distance threshold where mid-line amps would be required, and as alluded to 
here, no big carrier would want to take on risk to the network that they’re not 
in control of. There’s not much sense in doing it in shorter-distance scenarios 
when most folks needing enough bandwidth to even have the conversation are 
going to be able to run their own optical systems across dark fiber at that 
distance anyway. The customers that we talked to about it were almost 
exclusively other carriers that wanted to use the muxes they had in inventory 
(aka not the same platform as the photonic layer) without the burden of 
deploying/managing a lot of amps but had no issue taking OTN or even LAN PHY in 
bulk when push came to shove. 

FWIW, and I understand these terms have become fungible over time, the scenario 
above is spectrum from the perspective of the photonic layer owner and alien 
wave from the perspective of the customer. As the photonic layer owner, alien 
wave would generally be thought of as 1) accepting a handoff as a WDM-specific 
channel of light, whether on fixed or tunable optics, not a standard 1310/1550, 
and, typically but not necessarily, 2) accepting a signal that is framed as 
OTN, not LAN PHY or WAN PHY.  

For the record, the OP’s query about passive wave would suggest PON/GPON or 
similar low-power CWDM for short-haul use, and not spectrum or alien wave, both 
of which are decidedly non-passive. 

Dave Cohen
craetd...@gmail.com

> On Oct 13, 2020, at 4:24 PM, Brandon Martin <lists.na...@monmotha.net> wrote:
> 
> On 10/13/20 4:01 PM, Mike Hammett wrote:
>> It seems incredibly simple to do, depending on the capabilities of your 
>> platform.
>> What am I missing?
> 
> If the span between the mux/demux pair is entirely passive, it's fairly 
> straightforward.  That's going to limit distances to around 80km or so with 
> conventional systems or maybe 120km with systems designed entirely around 
> modern coherent optics.
> 
> If there are photonic devices in the span, you now have customer-supplied 
> light being part of the rainbow that those photonics have to handle.  
> Balancing things at amplifiers requires careful coordination with the 
> customer (or adding a separate managed/monitored VOA for each alien wave 
> which somewhat defeats the point).  You end up with a scenario where a 
> customer can do something screwy and potentially affect other waves on 
> potentially multiple spans which your big-name carriers are obviously 
> completely freaked out by.
> 
> It's obviously possible, but the operational headache seems large enough that 
> the major mid-haul and long-haul carriers I've talked to (all North America 
> and all midwest, for that matter), don't seem to want to sell it despite all 
> the major optical transport platform vendors not just supporting it by 
> heavily pushing it.
> 
> I really do hope it becomes a real product that I (as a smaller, local island 
> operator) can buy, but it just doesn't seem to be there yet at least in my 
> region.
> -- 
> Brandon Martin

Reply via email to