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                            <title><![CDATA[ Latest from Next TV in Docsis-31-4k ]]></title>
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        <description><![CDATA[ All the latest docsis-31-4k content from the Next TV team ]]></description>
                                    <lastBuildDate>Thu, 28 Jul 2016 23:57:00 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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                                                            <title><![CDATA[ Nbn Lights Broadband Service on Former Telstra HFC Network ]]></title>
                                                                                                                                                                                                <link>https://www.nexttv.com/news/nbn-lights-broadband-service-former-telstra-hfc-network-406724</link>
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                            <![CDATA[ Nbn Lights Broadband Service on Former Telstra HFC Network ]]>
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                                                                        <pubDate>Thu, 28 Jul 2016 23:57:00 +0000</pubDate>                                                                                                                                                                                                                                <category><![CDATA[Technology]]></category>
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                                                                                                                    <dc:creator><![CDATA[ Jeff Baumgartner ]]></dc:creator>                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    <media:content type="image/jpeg" url="https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/Kha4h94rPveQrPrCcHezfN-1280-80.jpg">
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                                <figure class="van-image-figure pull-" data-bordeaux-image-check ><div class='image-full-width-wrapper'><div class='image-widthsetter' ><p class="vanilla-image-block" style="padding-top:56.25%;"><img id="Kha4h94rPveQrPrCcHezfN" name="" alt="" src="https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/Kha4h94rPveQrPrCcHezfN.jpg" mos="https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/Kha4h94rPveQrPrCcHezfN.jpg" align="" fullscreen="" width="" height="" attribution="" endorsement="" class="pull-"></p></div></div></figure><p>The Australian government-backed National Broadband Network (nbn) said it has launched commercial broadband services on Telstra’s former hybrid fiber/coax network in Ocean Reef, Western Austria.</p><p>The launch, which offers services of up to 100 Mbps down by 40 Mbps upstream from what it calls “Retail Service Providers” follows nbn’s first commercial HFC services launch in Redcliffe, Queensland, on June 30 on the former Optus network.</p><p>nbn said Optus, TPG and Exetel are offering HFC services at launch, with Telstra likely to be joining that group of sellers soon. </p><p>In addition to 100/40, other speed tiers offered on the nbn HFC network are 50/20, 25/5 and 12/1, an nbn official noted, adding that “most” of the RSPs implement data caps that vary by provider, with many set at either 250 gigabytes, 500 GB or 1 terabyte.</p><p>“It is worth remembering that we will actually be one of the first operators in the world to deliver open access wholesale services over an HFC network so we have broken a lot of new ground in these last couple of years and now that hard work will pay off for our customers and end-users,” John Simon, chief customer officer at nbn, said in a statement.</p><p>Nbn’s near-term plan is to have about 200,000 HFC “end-user premises” activated by June 2017 as it works on a rollout that will eventually cover a footprint of more than 3 million premises.</p><p>Nbn, which <a href="https://www.nexttv.com/news/study-aussie-government-network-buildout-falls-short-406623" data-original-url="https://www.multichannel.com/news/study-aussie-government-network-buildout-falls-short-406623">isn’t without its critics</a>, <a href="https://www.nexttv.com/news/nbn-eyes-docsis-31-launch-406547" data-original-url="https://www.multichannel.com/news/nbn-eyes-docsis-31-launch-406547">expects to launch DOCSIS 3.1 services</a> and target gigabit speeds in the second half of 2017.</p><p>The group’s broader plan is to deliver broadband to 12 million premises in Australia via FTTP, FTTN, HFC, fixed wireless and satellite by 2020.</p>
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                                                            <title><![CDATA[ Comcast Makes Another Fiber Connection ]]></title>
                                                                                                                                                                                                <link>https://www.nexttv.com/news/comcast-makes-another-fiber-connection-394949</link>
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                            <![CDATA[ Comcast Makes Another Fiber Connection ]]>
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                                                                        <pubDate>Thu, 29 Oct 2015 22:15:00 +0000</pubDate>                                                                                                                                                                                                                                <category><![CDATA[Content]]></category>
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                                                                                                                    <dc:creator><![CDATA[ Jeff Baumgartner ]]></dc:creator>                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    <media:content type="image/jpeg" url="https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/hHaSuGYVrVnRX4xf2PBX28-1280-80.jpg">
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                                <figure class="van-image-figure pull-" data-bordeaux-image-check ><div class='image-full-width-wrapper'><div class='image-widthsetter' ><p class="vanilla-image-block" style="padding-top:56.25%;"><img id="hHaSuGYVrVnRX4xf2PBX28" name="" alt="" src="https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/hHaSuGYVrVnRX4xf2PBX28.jpg" mos="https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/hHaSuGYVrVnRX4xf2PBX28.jpg" align="" fullscreen="" width="" height="" attribution="" endorsement="" class="pull-"></p></div></div></figure><p>Comcast said <a href="http://www.xfinity.com/xfinitycommunities">Xfinity Communities</a>, its service program tailored for apartment buildings, healthcare facilities, and certain single-family home communities, has landed its first project in Connecticut – with Centerplans’ College & Crown project in New Haven.</p><p><a href="http://www.centerplanconstruction.com/projects/urban-mixed-use/college-crown-centerplan/">College & Crown</a>, located in the city’s primary business district near Yale University, is comprised of 160 apartments (from studios to two-bedroom units), plus 20,000 square feet of retail space.</p><p>The MSO’s “Advanced Communities Network” delivers gigabit speeds via a fiber-based platform, but will also support DOCSIS 3.1, an emerging multi-gigabit platform for HDC networks, when the technology is available.  All Xfinity Communities solutions “provide a path” for gigabit speeds.</p><p>In addition to high-speed Internet, Xfinity Communities also provides property owners with the option to offer video service (including the MSO’s new X1 platform) and WiFi access in common areas.</p><p>“Whether it’s gigabit speeds, Xfinity’s one-of-a-kind X1, digital voice or cutting-edge home security and automation, Xfinity Communities can deliver property owners with best-in-class service,” said Michael Parker, vice president of Comcast’s Western New England Region, in a statement. “For large properties like College & Crown, we can customize delivery using the infrastructure technology that best suits the owner’s and tenants’ needs.”</p>
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                                                            <title><![CDATA[ Cable-Tec Expo: Mobilizing for the Future ]]></title>
                                                                                                                                                                                                <link>https://www.nexttv.com/news/cable-tec-expo-mobilizing-future-394566</link>
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                            <![CDATA[ Cable-Tec Expo: Mobilizing for the Future ]]>
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                                                                        <pubDate>Wed, 14 Oct 2015 19:30:00 +0000</pubDate>                                                                                                                                                                                                                                <category><![CDATA[Cable TV]]></category>
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                                                                                                                    <dc:creator><![CDATA[ Jeff Baumgartner and Leslie Ellis ]]></dc:creator>                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    <media:content type="image/jpeg" url="https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/voE8ZCfbZJ6ZXJ5gnLtxFP-1280-80.jpg">
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                                <figure class="van-image-figure pull-" data-bordeaux-image-check ><div class='image-full-width-wrapper'><div class='image-widthsetter' ><p class="vanilla-image-block" style="padding-top:56.25%;"><img id="voE8ZCfbZJ6ZXJ5gnLtxFP" name="" alt="" src="https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/voE8ZCfbZJ6ZXJ5gnLtxFP.jpg" mos="https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/voE8ZCfbZJ6ZXJ5gnLtxFP.jpg" align="" fullscreen="" width="" height="" attribution="" endorsement="" class="pull-"></p></div></div></figure><p>New Orleans – A handful of top industry execs gathered here Wednesday at the General Session to discuss and debate the key technologies and trends that are impacting the industry now, are out on the viewable horizon, and even a few that are hiding behind corners.</p><p>And the topics were as diverse as the challenges faced by the industry, spanning mobile, multi-gigabit broadband, the IP video transition, and agile-style models that can enable operators to move at web-speed.</p><p><strong>Waxing Wireless</strong></p><p>While U.S. cable operators are leaning heavily on WiFi to lead their wireless strategies, Liberty Global has also been pushing hard on quad-play offerings that tie in the MVNO (mobile virtual network operator) model.</p><p>Mobile “is becoming the primary computing device,” Balan Nair, executive vice president and chief technology officer, said during a presentation about technology trends and how the operator is handling new forms of competition.</p><p>Liberty Global now has about 4.5 million mobile subscribers through its MVNO relationships (that sub number is expected to grow to 8 million through the MSO’s M&A activity), and Nair said Long Term Evolution (LTE) allows for seamless connectivity and the technology is on the road to delivering gigabit capacities.</p><p>“LTE is here to stay,” said Nair (pictured, credit: <a href="http://www.susanpoagphotography.com/#!/HOME">Susan Poag</a>).</p><p>But WiFi, he said, “is becoming a bigger and bigger part of our story going forward,” noting that delivering a good WiFi experience in the home matters more to many consumers than the wired broadband pipe connecting the home itself.</p><p>Nair also shed some light on Liberty Global’s future plans, telling the crowed that the MSO is working on its first “WiFi-first” device, which would prefer WiFi access when it’s available, and seamlessly fall back to the LTE mobile network when it’s not.</p><p>Enabling that seamless transition “is not an easy thing to do,” Nair allowed, adding that Liberty Global expects to introduce its first WiFi-first product toward the fourth quarter of 2016.</p><p>During the follow-up panel moderated by Cox Communications president Pat Esser, Nair outlined four ways cable operators can enter the mobile game – they can build and operate the network themselves (if they have spectrum), buy another mobile provider, launch a “light” MVNO whereby the MSO is relegated as a reseller, or introduce a “full” MVNO play where the operator builds out the mobile “core,” keeps call control and essentially rents access to the radios and base stations.</p><p>Liberty Global has tried out all four and Nair was direct about the issues cable operators face with the home-grown route. “I’ll tell you, building sucks,” he said.  Though Liberty Global was able to obtain spectrum relatively cheaply, the MSO shut down its home-grown network about 18 months after launching it.</p><p>He said Liberty Global has found the most success from an operational and economic standpoint with the full  MVNO approach, which allows the operator to control the SIM card that goes in the smartphone.</p><p> “In the end, it’s about handsets and price,” he said, noting that he puts the light MVNO on the “bottom of the list” because the operator has no control – it’s just about renting and selling.</p><p>Nair also talked up the positive affect quad-play bundles have on customer retention. “Over time, the churn rate it is discernable between a quad pay and a non quad-play,” he said. “There’s a  downside, though. if you screw up with mobile you lose all four -- you lose the whole quad play.”</p><p><strong>Service Agility, IP Video, Cybersecurity</strong></p><p>Other topics of note from Wednesday’s conversation: Service agility, customer-centricity, the all-IP progression, and cybersecurity.</p><p>Comcast, fresh off the national rollout of its voice remote, will launch an add-on called “X1 Answers” in mid-November, said MSO executive vice president and CTO Tony Werner.</p><p>“You’ll be able to  ask -- what was the Broncos score, how tall is the Empire State Building? -- I think it’s going to change a lot of things,” he said.</p><p>The transition to all-IP is foundational to proactive change, Werner and others said. By this time next year, Comcast will have deployed 8 million pure-IP set-tops, which matters to serving video on second screens.</p><p>“We have the same number of Baby Boomers as Millennials right now, and the Millennials are watching  a lot more content on mobile,” Werner said. “If we have 24 million customer relationships and 15 million video starts in a week [on mobile devices] -- that’s exponential, and it will probably only continue to grow. If you don’t have video over IP, you’re going to miss a big part of the audience -- and it’s a growing part, not a shrinking part.”</p><p>Rolling out more features and services more quickly is a big priority for all network operators, execs said.</p><p>Liberty Global, which is deploying solely Reference Design Kit-based devices, and will begin converting to HEVC (High Efficiency Video Codec) for 4K/Ultra HD video next year, will get to service agility using defined and publishable APIs (Application Program Interfaces), Nair said.</p><p>“I just want to build a stack that has almost every functionality covered by API -- it’s a big transition for us.”</p><p>For Nomi Bergman, president of Bright House Networks, the near-term product future includes more 10-Gigabit EPON (Ethernet Passive Optical Network), with an eye towards 100G EPON. “We’re now helping to create the standard for that,” she said.” Also hot in BHN markets: Its “Echo”-branded whole-home WiFi solution.</p><p>“It represents a really nice collaboration between the technology, product and marketing teams,” she said.</p><p>On the heels of Tuesday’s Cybersecurity Symposium, Nair <a href="http://www.nltimes.nl/2015/08/20/ziggo-more-cyber-attacks-expected/">described a massive hack in the Netherlands</a>, where 2 million broadband connections were shut down, two nights in a row. The four perpetrators were arrested last week, and the incident caused Liberty to overhaul its crisis handling mechanisms.</p><p>“In dealing with communications, law enforcement, regulatory, PR -- as it turned out, what we had wasn’t the most easily translatable during a crisis. We had to rebuild a lot of our processes,” Nair said.</p><p>Panelists were also asked to discuss some things they’re working on today. For Phil McKinney, president and CEO of CableLabs, his thinking tends to gravitate to what’s coming tomorrow, noting that his group has been focused on “exponential technologies” – things that are outside the scope of the traditional planning cycle.</p><p>He worries about “what’s beyond the horizon…so that we don’t get surprised.”</p><p>But when later pressed to identify a theme for 2016, McKinney offered this: “It’s all about multi-gig,” a reference to the emergence of DOCSIS 3.1.</p>
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