Wednesday, December 12, 2012

FCC Proposes 100 MHz of Shared Spectrum for Small Cells in 3.5 GHz Band


The FCC is proposing to make available 100 megahertz of shared spectrum in the 3.5 GHz Band (3550-3650 MHz) for small cell deployments.

The FCC said it envisions three tiers of users, each with different levels of rights and protections in the 3.5 GHz Band:
  • The first tier, Incumbent Access, would include authorized federal users and grandfathered fixed satellite service licensees. These incumbents would be afforded protection from all other users in the 3.5 GHz Band.
  • The second tier, Protected Access, would include critical use facilities, such as hospitals, utilities, government facilities, and public safety entities that would be afforded quality-assured access to a portion of the 3.5 GHz Band in certain designated locations.
  • The third tier, General Authorized Access, would include all other users – including the general public – that would have the ability to operate in the 3.5 GHz Band subject to protections for Incumbent Access and Protected Access users. 
A spectrum access system, incorporating a geo-location enabled dynamic database, would govern access to the 3.5 GHz Band.

The President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) issued a
report this summer recommending spectrum sharing and small cell use in the 3.5 GHz Band.



The PCAST Report - July 2012
U.S. federal policy should shift in favor "Shared-Use Spectrum Superhighways" instead the current plan which is to first clear federal users from specific bands and then auction this spectrum for the exclusive use of the highest bidder, according to a new report issued by the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST). The report identifies 1,000 MHz of federal spectrum for sharing with the private sector.

The New Spectrum Superhighway plan (1) divides spectrum into substantial blocks with common characteristics (2) makes sharing by Federal users with commercial users the norm (3) measures spectrum effectiveness using a new metric (4) increases capacity by "1,000’s of times." 

A Presidential memorandum issued in June 2010 requires that 500 MHz of spectrum to be made available for commercial use within 10 years.  However, a recent NTIA Study found that clearing just one 95 MHz band will take 10 years, cost $18 billion, and cause significant disruption. Moreover, the net revenue for the Treasury from the last successful auction of 45 MHz realized a net income of just a few hundred million a year ($5.3 billion total).

The PCAST report said its vision of shared spectrum is viable using existing technologies and is not dependent on cognitive or "smart" radios. Instead, a geo-location database could be used the share spectrum much like how the FCC is using managing TV bands. The TV Whitespaces system could be used as a model. Technical standards would need to be implemented for coexistence of transmitters and receivers to enable flexible sharing.

To get things rolling, the PCAST report recommends that an incentive mechanism be created to encourage Federal agencies to begin sharing (e.g., Spectrum Currency). The existing Spectrum Relocation Fund, which is supposed to fund the migration of federal users out of certain bands, could be redeveloped into a "Spectrum Efficiency Fund." The system could be tested in a specific city before being extended nationwide.

The 192 page report is posted online.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/eop/ostp/pcast

Cloud Velocity Debuts Hybrid Cloud Automation Suite with App Cloning

Cloud Velocity, a start-up based in Santa Clara, California, emerged from stealth mode and unveiled its Hybrid Cloud Automation Platform for helping enterprises to rapidly migrate applications to public clouds by automating the underlying system and network dependencies.  The mission of the company is to provide the software tools needed to seamlessly clone applications from an enterprise data centers to a public cloud either for scalability and cost savings or for failover to the cloud in the event of a primary data center outage. Applications can run without modification in the cloud and continue to access services that reside in the enterprise data center.

The company has demonstrated full server, networking, security and storage integration with AWS, a key enterprise requirement for complex, multi-tier applications in any cloud.  CloudVelocity plans to integrate other public clouds in 2013.

Cloud Velocity has now opened beta trials to its Developer Edition cloud cloning software, which allows users to quickly and safely clone multi-tier app clusters and services, without modification into the Amazon Web Services (AWS) EC2 cloud. The company is also offering an Enterprise Edition beta trial that enables users to clone, migrate and failover multitier apps and services into the AWS EC2 cloud.

CloudVelocity, which was previously known as Denali Systems while in stealth mode, recently closed $5 million in Series A funding from Mayfield Fund.  The company's co-founders include Rajeev Chawla (formerly CEO of NeoPath Networks, which was acquired by Cisco), Anand Iyengar (formerly CTO at NeoPath), Panor Tsirigotis (formerly Chief Software Architect at NeoPath), and Raman Chawla (formerly Senior Director of Engineering at NeoPath).


"Mayfield Fund has a 43- year history of successful incubations, where we partner with
entrepreneurs at the idea stage and help create a company that tackles big problems and
CloudVelocity is another example of this" said Navin Chaddha, Mayfield Fund Managing
Director.  "We believe that CloudVelocity will have the same impact on public cloud adoption
as VMware did on the adoption of server virtualization by making public clouds look like
internal data centers."

http://www.cloudvelocity.com


ESnet Activates 100GbE with Infinera

The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Energy Sciences Network (ESnet) has activated 100 Gigabit Ethernet (GbE) services on the Long Island MAN portion of its network.   ESnet will offer 100GbE services from DOE’s Brookhaven National Laboratory to data centers in Manhattan and back onto ESnet’s nationwide network. 

ESnet is using Infinera's DTN platform.  ESnet first deployed the Infinera DTN platform for an advanced network testbed, and then leveraged the platform to provide production network services over the dark fiber ring in Long Island.

Brookhaven National Laboratory is one of two facilities in the U.S. making data from the Large Hadron Collider’s ATLAS experiment available to the 44 U.S. institutions participating in the ATLAS project. 

http://www.infinera.com
http://www.es.net/



  • In November, Infinera and the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Energy Sciences Network (ESnet) demonstrated a prototype Software Defined Network (SDN) Open Transport Switch (OTS) capable of dynamically controlling bandwidth services at the optical layer via an extensions to the OpenFlow protocol. The idea is to provide a lightweight virtual transport switch on optical transport systems with an interface to an SDN Controller.
  • The proof-of-concept demonstration, which used ESnet's Long Island Metropolitan Area Network (LIMAN) control plane test bed, tested a prototype of the OTS running on the Infinera DTN platform, allowing ESnet’s optical transport network to be configured by an SDN controller via the OpenFlow protocol. 

Cisco Targets Converged Cable Access with new CMTS Line Cards and Processing Blade

Cisco is building its Converged Cable Access Platform (CCAP) architecture with a new high-density line card and a new high-performance processing engine for its flagship Cisco uBR10012 Universal Broadband Router (uBR10K) and Cisco Cable Modem Termination System.

CCAP is a new cable access architecture backed by CableLabs that combines the functions of two key technologies: the cable modem termination system (powers DOCSIS and other high-speed broadband services) and edge QAM (powers video services). Combining the two functions helps service providers reduce rack space, save power, and accelerate the transition to an all-IP network that can simplify the delivery of video content to multiple screens.

Cisco's new Performance Routing Engine (PRE5) and 3 Gigabit Shared Port Adapter (3GSPA) effectively double the number of downstream channels available for the uBR10K, from a total of 576 to 1,152, without needing any additional rack space. The PRE5 quadruples the chassis capacity to 40+ Gbps. Up to eight 3GSPA line cards can be used per Cisco uBR10K CMTS. Each 3GSPA card can support up to 72 downstream licenses per port.

Cisco said its new modules will allow cable service providers to make better use of their existing platform, while adopting an incremental deployment approach to using more ports, with a pay-as-you-grow business model. Trials are expected to begin in Q1 2013.

http://www.cisco.com

Vitesse and Microsemi Develop 1588v2 Sync and Timing Reference Design

Vitesse Semiconductor and Microsemi Corp. introduced a reference design for implementing IEEE 1588v2 synchronization and timing in packet-based networks.

The reference design uses Vitesse's Serval VSC7418 Carrier Ethernet Switch Engine with VeriTime 1588 technology and Microsemi's ZL30343 SyncE/IEEE1588 packet synchronizer (DPLL) and clock recovery algorithm. The reference design meets the performance demands for timing synchronization in accordance with ITU-T Recommendation G.8262/G.8261 for wireless base stations, radio network controllers, gateways, aggregation and transmission equipment, and routers while reducing design complexity.

"Our jointly developed reference design allows broadband service providers to simplify the implementation of 1588 synchronization and timing technology and streamline the transition to IP Edge networks," said Maamoun Seido, vice president for timing products at Microsemi. "Demand for precise timing and synchronization solutions is growing and we will continue to collaborate with industry leaders such as Vitesse to deliver industry-standard 1588 solutions to meet this need."

"This reference design provides our customers with a proven path to add precision timing needed for carrier access and backhaul networks," said Uday Mudoi, product marketing director at Vitesse. "Vitesse's VeriTime portfolio delivers nanosecond accurate time-stamping for both microwave and fiber networks, which when combined with the Microsemi DPLL and clock recovery algorithm, helps OEMs expedite upgrades to meet 4G/LTE network timing requirements."

http://www.vitesse.com/ce/1588-ref-design
http://www.microsemi.com


MTN South Africa Launches LTE with Ericsson


MTN South Africa has launched its commercial LTE network following more than a year of pilot activity.  The carrier is currently offering an LTE version of the Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9″ with a 2GB data allowance for R799.00 (US$92) per month with a 12 month contract.  Coverage is initially available in certain areas of Pretoria , Johannesburg and Durban.

Ericsson has supplied its RBS 6000 family of base stations, the Evolved Packet Core, Home Subscriber Server (HSS) for user data management, Operating Support Systems (OSS), project management and services.

Lars Lindén, head of Region Sub-Saharan Africa, Ericsson, said: "This will open countless opportunities and will change the way people work, live and play. The commercial deployment of LTE will help users experience and interact in a better, more efficient way."

Ericsson noted that this marks its first LTE network in Africa.  The company currently has over  90 commercial LTE contracts on six continents, of which over 50 networks have already gone live. More than 455 million people worldwide have LTE coverage, of which 305 million are covered by LTE networks supplied by Ericsson (July 2012).

http://www.ericsson.com/
http://www.mtn.co.za

AT&T Selects G&D for Worldwide M2M SIM Management

AT&T has selected Giesecke & Devrient's AirOn technology to manage subscription credentials on embedded M2M SIMs over-the-air.

This will enable AT&T to provide manufacturers of connected consumer and machine-to machine (M2M) devices with seamless access to a global platform for service management, application development, professional services and product support.

"With the introduction of our new single worldwide SIM solution and the ability to provision over the air, we're giving our device makers the convenience of coverage around the globe, while also enabling enhanced global services like local telecom," said Chris Penrose, senior vice president, emerging devices, AT&T.

"We're seeing a trend towards integrating SIM cards at an earlier point in the value chain, when mobile devices are produced," said Dr. Klaus Vedder, Giesecke & Devrient's Group Senior Vice President. "By utilizing AirOn technology in its single SIM offering, AT&T will be able to supply customers with the service flexibility they demand."


European Cable Operator Upgrades Policy Control with Procera


Procera Networks announced a follow-on $1.3 million order from a Tier 1 multi-system operator (MSO) in Western Europe. This operator serves broadband subscribers across its countrywide footprint as part of its residential triple play service offerings.

This cable operator first installed Procera PacketLogic 10000 platforms in 2008 and with this order, is upgrading to the PacketLogic 20000 to take advantage of its throughput capacity, massive scalability and high availability features. Procera expects to recognize the majority of revenue from this order in the fourth quarter of 2012, and the first quarter of 2013.

http://www.proceranetworks.com

Sandvine Books $4.5 Million Follow-On Orders in Europe

Sandvine has received Network Policy Control orders from two Western European mobile operators totaling over $4.5 million. The orders expand existing Sandvine deployments that enable “bill shock” notification and differentiated subscriber services. The customers are part of a multinational operator group with properties in Europe and Latin America.

The company expects to recognize the majority of related revenues in the first half of 2013.

http://www.sandvine.com

TeliaSonera Receives US$525 Million for Kcell's IPO

TeliaSonera raised US$525 million (approximately SEK 3.5 billion) in proceeds from the sale of 50 million shares in Kcell, the leading provider of mobile communications services in Kazakhstan. Following the offering, TeliaSonera will directly and indirectly hold an interest of 61.9 percent in Kcell.

Kcell priced its share offering at USD 10.50 per GDR and KZT 1,578.68 per common share and that trading will on Thursday. Based on the offer price, Kcell’s market capitalization is approximately USD 2.1 billion at listing.

"We are very pleased by the positive response from both Kazakh and international investors to the opportunity of investing in Kcell. In a short period of time, and in a relatively tough stock market, we have managed to successfully complete two IPOs. This increases the value of our stakes in both MegaFon and Kcell, which continues to be one of our most valuable subsidiaries and a strategic asset”, says Lars Nyberg, President and CEO, TeliaSonera.

http://www.teliasonera.com

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Fujitsu, NTT and NEC Target 400G Coherent Optical Transmission

Fujitsu, NTT and NEC are jointly developing 400 Gbps/channel-class digital coherent optical transmissions technology.

The companies have undertaken a joint R&D project that aims to leverage the technological capabilities that have enabled the commercialization of 100Gbps-class optical transmission. The R&D initiative was commissioned and is sponsored by Japan's Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications (MIC) as part of the "Research and Development Project for the Ultra-high Speed and Green Photonic Networks".

Specifically, Fujitsu, NTT and NEC have pursued R&D on 100Gbps-class digital coherent optical communications technology as part of the MIC's "Research and Development on High Speed Optical Transport System Technologies" program (2009) and "Research and Development on Ultra-high Speed Optical Edge Node Technologies" program (2010-2011).

As a result of the previous research, a digital coherent DSP-LSI was commercialized in 2012 and is now being being deployed by each company. The new initiative will accelerate this work for 400Gbps-class optical transmissions.

The joint research project is targeting dual-polarization quadrature phase shift keying (DP-QPSK)(3), which is currently in use for 100Gbps transmissions, together with dual-polarization 16 quadrature amplitude modulation (DP-16QAM), which takes advantage of an even greater number of quadrature carriers.

The companies said that by incorporating these modulation techniques into a high-density 60-channel fiber, the technology will be able to bring about optical networks capable of 24 Tbps/fiber.  The goal will require development of the first compensation technology for nonlinear optical effects within an optical fiber.  This is the primary limiting factor standing in the way of long-distance transmission of multiple quadrature modulated signals. When employed together with enhanced-performance versions of existing compensation technologies for chromatic dispersion and polarization mode dispersion, the new technology will achieve longer transmission distances.

The companies will pursue the implementation of adaptive modulation/demodulation technology that can employ a host of modulation techniques depending on the transmission route using a single hardware device, thereby leading to the construction of flexible network

http://www.fujitsu.com/global/news/pr/archives/month/2012/20121211-02.html

FCC Approves Changes to AWS-4 Spectrum Requirements

The FCC voted unanimously to approve an order that frees up 40 MHz of underutilized satellite spectrum for land-based mobile broadband, including 4G LTE.  The decision removes regulatory barriers that limited this spectrum to satellite use.

The FCC said its action balances technical requirements and will unlock value in both the AWS-4 band and the 10 MHz H Block.

DISH issued a statement supporting the action.  “The FCC has removed outdated regulations and granted terrestrial flexibility for most of the AWS-4 band. We appreciate the hard work and focus of the FCC and its staff throughout this process. The Commission has taken an important step toward facilitating wireless competition and innovation, and fulfilling the goals of the National Broadband Plan. Following a more thorough review of the order and its technical details, DISH will consider its strategic options and the optimal approach to put this spectrum to use for the benefit of consumers,” stated Jeff Blum, DISH senior vice president and deputy general counsel.

The FCC also unanimously approved a proposal setting the stage for an auction of the H
Block in 2013. Proceeds from this auction will help fund a nationwide Public Safety Network for first responders and reduce the deficit.

http://www.fcc.gov

Berlin's ECIX Internet Exchange Upgrades to 40 GbE Trunks

Berlin's ECIX, the second-largest German Internet exchange, has upgraded its fabric with Extreme Networks' BlackDiamond X8 switch and is now offering 40 GbE connections to its members.

The European Commercial Internet Exchange (ECIX), with locations in Dusseldorf, Berlin and Hamburg, serves more than 120 carriers and Internet service providers. The BlackDiamond X8 switching systems will be implemented in all of its locations.

ECIX currently operates 204 active physical ports, 52 of which are 10 gigabit ports. Its peak bandwidth is greater than 100 Gbps. At the moment 191 autonomous systems from carriers and internet service providers are connected.

Extreme Networks BlackDiamond X8 switch can handles 20-Terabit non-blocking traffic with up to 768 ports for 10 GbE or 192 ports for 40 GbE in a 14.5 RU chassis or 1/3 rack.

"Availability of the BlackDiamond X8 came for us at precisely the right time as we are upgrading our performance," said Stefan Wahl, CEO of Peering GmbH and Managing Director of ECIX. "For our members, price and availability are very important factors. With its high port density, extremely competitive price and the low energy consumption, the system offers comparatively reasonable costs per port which we can then pass on to our customers."

http://www.extremenetworks.com
http://www.ecix.net/


  • In September, DE-CIX, the Internet exchange located in Frankfurt am Main (Germany), hit a new data throughput record last week  as Internet traffic across its switching fabric exceeded the 2 Tbps (terabits per second) mark for the first time.

    DE-CIX currently servers over 480 Internet service providers from over 50 countries.  At DE-CIX, more than 12 petabytes of data are exchanged per day.

    "Although the traffic peak of over 2 Tbps marks a new high,” says Harald A. Summa, CEO at DE-CIX Management GmbH, “we do not see an end to data traffic growth on the horizon. We assume that Internet traffic will continue to grow by about 80 per cent per year in the future”. At DE-CIX, HD-TV, video and multimedia content, online gaming and cloud computing are considered the main drivers behind the continuing increase in data traffic."

    The switching fabric of DE-CIX has the potential to scale to 40 Tbps, according to Arnold Nipper, Technical Manager at DE-CIX. "The DE-CIX peering infrastructurehas a star-shaped topology and is spread out over a total of twelve data centers operated by different providers in the Frankfurt metropolitan area.  The center of the DE-CIX peering star is composed of two redundant core switch clusters, one active and the other in hot standby mode.  If there are any problems with the operative switch cluster, data traffic is immediately and automatically, in other words within milliseconds, routed to the other switch cluster so that data streams can flow continually without interruption.  The central core switch clusters are redundantly connected to 14 other switches which are in turn connected to the ISPs."http://www.de-cix.net/about/statistics/ 

  • Equipment deployed in the DE-CIX distributed fabric includes Force10 Networks' Terascale platform.

Zayo Confirms 100G Upgrade on U.S. Network

Zayo has activated 100G wavelength services across major markets in the United States.

The company confirmed that the 100G wavelength platform is already operational in some locations and will continue to be deployed during the rest of 2012 and into the first half of 2013. Its vendor has not been disclosed.

By upgrading long-haul and metro market networks, Zayo can provide native 100G Wavelength connectivity to key traffic aggregation points and IP nodes throughout the U.S.

"Zayo is a focused bandwidth infrastructure provider and upgrading along key routes to 100G technology is the next step in providing customers with the latest high bandwidth technology," says Zach Nebergall of Zayo's wavelength product group. "Additionally, the Zayo national network provides unique route options which enable our customers to take advantage of fiber path diversity between these core traffic aggregation locations."

http://www.zayo.com

TNS Accepts Acquisition Offer from Siris

TNS (NYSE: TNS), which offers a range of networks and value-added services that enable transactions and the exchange of information in diverse industries, will be privatized by an investor group led by Siris Capital Group.  The deal is valued at approximately $862 million, or $21.00 per share in cash, representing a premium of approximately 44% over the closing price on December 10, 2012 and 47% over TNS' volume weighted average share price during the last 30 days.

Among its activities,  operates the largest un-affiliated SS7 (Signaling System No. 7) networks in the United States. TNS also offers a suite of advanced signaling, intelligent database and nextgen services for telecom operators.
"Our Board is confident that this transaction is in the best interests of our stockholders, customers and employees," said Stephen X. Graham, Chairman of the Special Committee of the TNS Board. "Engaging with Siris will help TNS work toward our goal of transitioning from a legacy network provider to building various value-added data communication applications."

http://www.tnsi.com



  • TNS is based in Reston, Virginia.


Qualcomm Atheros Integrates Wireless Controller in GigE Switching Chip

Qualcomm Atheros introduced a high port-count Gigabit Ethernet switching chip that integrates wireless controller functions into the switch silicon for the first time.  This enables the solution to process and forward both wired Ethernet 802.3 and Wi-Fi 802.11 packets simultaneously at wire speed.

The new chipsets are designed for automated, end-to-end switch and access points with cloud management capabilities for small business networks.

Qualcomm Atheros' new QCA871x series chip supports the Control and Provisioning of Wireless Access Points Protocol (CAPWAP), allowing remote access point control and management.  It also eliminates the need for an external multi-core CPU commonly employed in traditional Wi-Fi Access Controller architectures, replacing it with an integrated, high-performance CPU, thus providing a competitive cost structure to address SMB requirements.

Qualcomm Atheros' QCA871x/QCA851x  switch series also offers rich managed Layer 2/Layer 3 (L2/L3) features in an easy to use solution with reduced complexity and cost structure relative to the traditional enterprise switch, thus bringing a high-performance, yet cost-effective solution to the SMB segment. Sampling is under way.

http://www.qualcomm.com

Defense Dept Data Center Tries Direct-to-Chip Water Cooling


The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) will retrofit one of its data centers with direct-to-chip liquid-cooling technology from Asetek.

The $2 million project will use Asetek's RackCDU (Rack Coolant Distribution Unit) technology, which is a hot water, direct-to-chip, data center liquid cooling system that removes heat from CPUs, GPUs, memory modules and other hot spots within servers.  No power is used to chill the water.  The direct-to-chip cooling loops replace existing air heat sinks, with tubes exiting through an unused PCIe slot in the server chassis.

Johnson Controls Federal Systems is the installer and integrator for the project.

Asetek claims a more than 50% cooling cost savings.

“The Department of Defense has become very serious about improving data center efficiency, and they are seeking new approaches to address this mission-critical problem,” said Andre Eriksen, Asetek’s CEO and founder. “Hot water direct-to-chip liquid-cooling is a powerful approach that can capture more than 80% of the heat generated by a data center and remove it from the building, where it can be cooled for free by ambient air or even reused for building heating and hot water. No power what so ever goes in to actively chilling the water.”

http://www.asetek.com
http://www.asetek.com/press-room/news/386-asetekr-inc-selected-to-retrofit-major-dod-data-center-with-rackcdu-liquid-cooling.html

  • Asetek is headquartered in San Jose, California with offices in Denmark, China and Taiwan. The company was founded in 2000.

Telefónica Digital Picks Ericsson as Prime integrator of Global Video Platform


Ericsson has been selected as prime integrator of Telefónica Digital's next-generation video platform.

The multi-year, multi-country deal includes IPTV middleware, OTT back-office, Digital Rights Management Systems and Content Management Systems, Managed Services, as well as Ericsson Operations Support System (OSS) and Business Support System (BSS).   Telefónica's own R&D is developing and launching the user experience interface for GVP. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Telefónica's Global Video Platform (GVP) will allow its subscribers to access video services such as live TV, video on demand and premium services, simultaneously over any network for any device.

http://www.ericsson.com/news/1663941


  • In November, Telefónica Digital announced the selection of Microsoft's Mediaroom for its new Global Video Platform (GVP) for all video entertainment services across Telefónica’s Operating Businesses. Telefónica's GVP is an IPTV-based pay-TV subscription service --  including DVR, video on-demand and and other applications -- that can be delivered either on the carrier's own access network or as an over-the-top offering.  It supports a range of devices inside and outside the home, including set top boxes, Xbox 360s, tablets and smartphones.  Launches are already underway in Brazil (Vivo TV Fibra), Chile (Movistar IPTV) and Spain (Movistar Imagenio on Xbox 360).  The service is Spain provides subscribers with 12 linear channels focused on sports including the Spanish First Soccer League (Liga BBVA) under Canal+ Liga Channel.



Go Daddy Hires Blake Irving as CEO


Go Daddy named Blake Irving as its new CEO, replacing Scott Wagner,  who has been serving as interim CEO since July. Irving most recently served as Chief Product Officer at Yahoo! Previosly, he spent 15 years at Microsoft, serving in various senior roles, most recently as Corporate Vice President of the Windows Live Platform.

http://www.GoDaddy.com

Monday, December 10, 2012

IBM's Silicon Nanophotonics Integrates 25G Tranceivers in 90nm CMOS

IBM has integrated multiple optical components alongside electrical circuits using 90nm semiconductor process technology.

Essentially, IBM has successfully added a variety of silicon nanophotonics components, such as wavelength division multiplexers (WDM), modulators, and detectors, alongside CMOS electrical circuitry using a conventional semiconductor foundry.

IBM’s CMOS nanophotonics used transceivers exceeding 25 Gbps per channel. IBM said its integration is capable of feeding a number of parallel optical data streams into a single fiber by utilizing compact on-chip wavelength-division multiplexing devices. The ability to multiplex large data streams at high data rates will allow future scaling of optical communications capable of delivering terabytes of data between distant parts of computer systems.

http://www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/pressrelease/39641.wss


  • In October 2012, IBM announced a breakthrough in building a semiconductor using carbon nanotubes instead of silicon.  IBM researchers created a device consisting of more than ten thousand working transistors made of nano-sized tubes of carbon.  Standard semiconductor processes were used to fabricate the device.  IBM has previously demonstrated that carbon nanotube transistors can operate as excellent switches at molecular dimensions of less than ten nanometers – less than half the size of the leading silicon technology.