LightCounting Analyzes
New Opto-Electronic Technologies Needed to Meet Bandwidth Demand Over the
Next Decade
LightCounting's
first Technology Review Report examines the key trends driving optical
transceiver use, led by the huge growth in Internet traffic.
India|May '2009: LightCounting's first
Technology Review Report examines the key trends driving optical
transceiver use, led by the huge growth in Internet traffic. The report
also provides a comprehensive review of the core technologies needed to
meet the continual requirement for faster, lower power and more compact
transceivers at all points in the network. These technologies include the
increasing role of electronics alongside optics, photonic integration
based on traditional and newer silicon photonics techniques, parallel
optics and advanced modulation schemes. Indeed advanced modulation for
40-Gbps and higher optical transmission speeds is the single most
important transponder development since the advent of dense wavelength
division multiplexing.
The report also addresses manufacturing issues. Manufacturing is a key
differentiator for transceiver firms, especially as the economic downturn
forces companies to fight on the basis of price as well as technical
advances, and when barriers to entry in the transceiver industry remain
low.
"A trying economic climate can now be added to the technology challenges
facing the transceiver industry," says Roy Rubenstein, Director of
Research at LightCounting. "But for those players that master the
technology to meet the demand for smaller, faster, lower-power
transceivers, and that make them efficiently, there is a real opportunity,
especially when data traffic shows no sign of slowing."
LightCounting's findings include how electronics will play an increasingly
important role within the optical industry and how the industry will
remain cautious in its use of photonic integration, despite its growing
prospects. The LightCounting Technology Review also provides market driver
analysis of high-speed optical transmission trends, next-generation
optical access including WDM-PON, as well as datacom developments such as
the battle between copper and optics, unified switch fabric, and the
continuing rise of active optical cables. Additionally, the Review
assesses optical transceiver product and transceiver form-factor trends as
well as provides an analysis of the technology options driving transceiver
development.
Reachout's News Bureau
May' 2009