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Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net 1 Juniper Networks: The “IP” in IPTV The 8 th Arab Telecom & Internet Forum Muscat, Oman 24 – 25 May 2006
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2 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Market Drivers
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3 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net IPTV Opportunity vs. Risks Clear Opportunity exist to add Video to the existing Voice and Data Services Expand share of wallet These help differentiate service offerings, add subs, and lower churn IPTV still in its infancy <2M lines deployed,30M-50M projected in 5 years (Source: Telephony Magazine) Presents an opportunity to lead the Market Competing against Other Video Sources (Cable, Satellite, Internet) No Differentiation is a recipe for disaster More importantly cost of delivering the service in an economical viable way
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4 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net IPTV and Beyond … IPTV is just one Service Red = “Triple Play” Blue = Service differentiator and opportunities for incremental revenue Choose an architecture that allows rapid intro of any of these services ! Bandwidth Consumption Latency/Loss Sensitivity Voice Music Download Game Download Video Conferencing/Telephony Secure Internet Console Gaming Video Download Internet Broadband IM (PC or STB) The Triple Play PC-based Streaming Video Video Turbo button internet Home Surveillance Potential Multi-Play Services
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5 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net What Creates Costs in Network? Network complexity is created by: Forecasts and number of customers Number of boxes and facilities Number of different boxes Number of required upgrades and installations Reliability and performance Complexity of provisioning and customer care process Complexity results in increases in both CAPEX and OPEX: Facilities costs Customer care headcount NOC Headcount Training and other costs
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6 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Building an Intelligent and Flexible IP Network for Multi- Play Services
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7 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Reference Architecture MPLS Core BSR/VSO DSLAM Aggregation User Edge Core
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8 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Customer Service and Provisioning IP Backbone Internet Port IPTV Video Head End or ASP DSLAM C- VLANs ASP (e.g. IP Telephony) ISP (Internet) VoIP Switch Video Head End or ASP DSLAM Service VLANs ASP (e.g. IP Telephony) ISP (Internet) Internet Port IPTV VoIP Customer VLANs enable: Service Pre-Provisioned thereby minimizing call to customer care Application integration at layer 3 with SDX Bandwidth sharing across applications Easy addition of new applications such as business services Service VLANs Require A device per service Application integration at higher layers in the OSI stack (significant development by vendors) Significant additional customer care costs Effect will be (5x number of service Connections) Higher service provisioning and customer care Higher application and future service deployment costs Possible reduction in revenue due to limited add-on applications Single Edge Approach Multi-Edge Approach
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9 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Preferred Architecture (Single Edge): Subscriber-centric approach based on Single Edge / C-VLAN model AAA BSR 1 x C-VLAN 1 x VC Stacked VLAN MC-VLAN All subscriber and service provisioning in BSR C-VLAN per subscriber for all unicast services Shared MC-VLAN for IPTV broadcast services Per-subscriber policy and QoS centralized in BSR Access and aggregation focus is on connectivity/transport 1 x VC 1 x C-VLAN Per subscriber RG Internet VoD VoIP TV SDP Subscriber Policy Manager
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10 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Multi Edge Architecture: Service-centric approach based on Multi Edge / Service-VLAN model RG AAA BRAS Service VLAN - Internet VC - Internet Per subscriber Service VLAN – VOD Video PE MC - VLAN Service VLAN - Voice VC - Voice VC - VOD VC - BCTV Subscriber and service provisioning in access/aggregation Shared VLAN per service for all unicast services Shared MC-VLAN for IPTV broadcast services Per-subscriber policy and QoS distributed over access/aggregation/BRAS Access and aggregation is now ‘service-aware’ VC - Internet VC - Voice VC - VOD VC – BCTV RG SDP ?
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11 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Subscriber Benefits Full access to all available bandwidth QoS for all services Provider Benefits: Eliminates need to statically partition bandwidth per service Minimizes planning and provisioning associated with rollout of IPTV Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation: Bandwidth, Where and When it’s Needed VOIP IP Video Data Internet Port IPTV VoIP Video/Hub Serving Office Video Head-end Office Video Hub Office Policy Manager Customer VLAN shaped to 10Mbps service Before IPTV is turned on – bandwidth fully allocated to Data/Voice Upon IPTV activation – Broadband Services Router adjusts BW to ensure IPTV QoE, Voice / Data allocated remaining bandwidth RG
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12 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Static ‘Carve Out’ Models: Bandwidth, Whether it’s Needed or Not Internet Port IPTV VoD High-speed Internet Broadcast video Video On Demand RG Complex/Static provisioning on a per-service basis = Big OPEX $$ What happens when there is a shift to HDTV? What happens when a new service is introduced? Migration path to interactive services? Using a VLAN/VC per service prevents resource sharing
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13 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Internet Port IPTV VoD High-speed Internet Broadcast video Video On Demand RG Network Architecture is Critical Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation between services works because……… A single converged network for all services Common Service Delivery Point (SDP) provides ability to share resources Auto Provisioning – zero touch too add new services and customers Simplifies Access Aggregation by centralizing complex tasks
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14 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Operational Cost Savings Assumes $12 cost to carrier to provision a service connection (not including ADSL connections) and shows the impact of cutting connection requests in half In the highest growth years this represents a $12.5M savings
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15 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Any Service, Any Access “Agnostic to Access Method” ADSL, ADSL2+, VDSL, FTTN, FTTP (APON, GPON), WiMax Access technologies will continue to evolve, physical plant deployments should not impede service delivery Intelligence is separate from the physical plant and its upgrades Invest in infrastructure which builds a framework for scalable and extensible service deployments A solution that works for residential, small business and large enterprise
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16 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Summary Choosing the right network architecture has far- reaching impact on cost and ensuing success of IPTV service High-speed Internet Access remains critically important….it’s an early adopter base for IPTV service A few Customers who chosen Juniper to be the “IP” in their IPTV services
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17 Copyright © 2006 Juniper Networks, Inc. Proprietary and Confidentialwww.juniper.net Copyright © 2005 Juniper Networks, Inc.17www.juniper.net Thank You! (rajan@juniper.net)
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