_____  

From: Dave Cohen [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, October 5, 2023 3:54 PM
To: [email protected]; Network Neutrality is back! Let´s make the technical 
aspects heard this time!
Cc: Livingood, Jason
Subject: Re: [NNagain] On "Throttling" behaviors

 

I admittedly know little about the service from the radio out in FWA 
deployments like this but have done a lot of work in the aggregation and 
backhaul arenas in both environments. The advantage the FWA folks have is that 
it is significantly more financially viable to not oversubscribe (or 
oversubscribe less) when you deliver more users from a more centralized next 
hop location. In other words, it’s easier and cheaper to have 100 Gbps serving 
1000 users from a single location than it is to have 1 Gbps serving 10 users 
from 100 different locations. Which is not to say that there aren’t other 
challenges in FWA environments relative to FTTx environments, but system 
capacity (you can always add more radios, with enough available spectrum, at 
least) isn’t one of them.

[RR] Well, yes and no.  Turns out this is a convex optimization problem (or at 
least can be converted in to one) that involves things like amount of spectrum, 
density of let’s call them access points (or APs), the capabilities of each AP 
in terms of tx power, number of antennas, how sophisticated the signal 
processing is that can be supported in those APs, and a few other things like 
adjacent channels and their pollution and constraints placed on the APs because 
they are secondary users of the band …

OK, with that as background  the question becomes at it’s simplest (leaving out 
for the moment things like OPEX, property leases, etc.):

“How many customers can I serve with X amount of infrastructure investment and 
Y amount of spectrum available to me (purchased or otherwise).  I am somewhat 
suspicious, though I have not done the analysis yet which is why I asked the 
question actually, that to use your example, supplying 100Gbps aggregate 
service to 1000 customers using FWA is not within the feasible region of the 
optimization space and therefore something has to give! :-) :-) :-)  FTR, FWA 
has been around for 3 decades or more (the company I started was selling such 
units in the mid-90’s, albeit largely for voice services since that what was 
wanted back then).  The systems that are still operational (and that’s a large 
number of them) have been upgraded to offer data services, however the number 
of subscribers needs to be capped well below that which ISPs using other newer 
technologies can support.  This is why I am interested to find out what the 
“state-of-ply” is today! :-) :-)

Cheers,

RR

Dave Cohen

[email protected]





On Oct 5, 2023, at 6:17 PM, Dick Roy via Nnagain 
<[email protected]> wrote:

 

Has anyone done an analysis of the capacity of FWA systems (in 
bits/sec/Hz/km^3)????  I am suspicious that the capacity falls way short of 
that which cable guys have at their disposal, and that as the FWA networks get 
loaded, performance is going to degrade dramatically ultimately resulting in 
churn back to the cable guys.  It's very expensive to compete with already sunk 
FTTH or even FTTC.  

 

RR

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Nnagain [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Livingood, Jason via Nnagain
Sent: Thursday, October 5, 2023 1:25 PM
To: Network Neutrality is back! Let´s make the technical aspects heard this 
time!
Cc: Livingood, Jason
Subject: Re: [NNagain] On "Throttling" behaviors

 

> On 10/4/23, 13:45, "Nnagain on behalf of David Lang via Nnagain" 
> <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]> on behalf of 
> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

 

> It's an unfortunate fact of reality that the enviornment in the US is one 
> where 

there is very little competition in the ISP space 

 

The SEC 10-K filings of ISPs no longer support that. Most wireline ISPs are 
losing subscribers (at material levels) to one of the three new national 5G FWA 
ISPs (Verizon, T-Mobile, AT&T). In addition, we will in a few years see the 
effects of $45B+ of grant money dedicated to underwrite new broadband access 
network construction - that is also pretty material. 

 

Per https://telecoms.com/523519/growth-in-5g-fwa-kit-matches-operator-hype/

- " 5G FWA customer premises equipment shipments more than doubled to 7.4 
million last year and should reach 13.8 million – that’s 86% growth – this year 
"

- " The GSA survey shows overall FWA CPE shipments of 25.5 million units last 
year, "

- " Statistics shared by Leichtman Research Group recently showed that T-Mobile 
and Verizon together recorded the best part of 900,000 5G FWA net adds in the 
second quarter of this year, significantly more than the virtually flat cable 
segment and ahead of the wireline broadband market, which lost almost 62,000 
customers in the three months. "

 

JL

 

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