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Bookham Inc. has announced that is has begun to supply 10-Gbit/sec tunable pluggable transceivers to Ciena Corp for use in a variety of platforms. A Bookham source says the
transceivers are not in a standard 10G format; a Ciena source says this
isn't a problem because they have a second source lined up to make a
device in the same format.
Bookham Inc. has announced that is has begun to supply 10-Gbit/sec tunable pluggable transceivers to Ciena Corp for use in a variety of platforms. A Bookham source says the
transceivers are not in a standard 10G format; a Ciena source says this
isn't a problem because they have a second source lined up to make a
device in the same format.
Ciena will use Bookham's LambdaFLEX TL8000 modules on the line side of
the CoreDirector Multiservice Switch, CoreStream Agility Optical
Transport System, and CN 4200 FlexSelect Advanced Services Platform for
core and metro network applications. While the company has XFP-E and XFP form factors on its
roadmap, Bookham VP Telecom Sales Yves LeMaitre confirmed that the
modules Ciena will receive won't be in a 10G MSA-compliant form factor.
Instead, the devices will be packaged in a footprint roughly the size
of an X2.
LeMaitre indicated that Ciena was willing to work with a
non-standard module size in the interests of getting tunable pluggable
technology into the field. James Zik, senior product marketing manager
at Ciena, confirmed that his engineers were willing to trade a standard
form factor for the functions they wanted. The deployment of the
tunable pluggables will allow Ciena to increase shelf port density
(when paired with other design enhancements) by a factor of 4, Zik
says; this will enable the company to rival densities achievable with
"integrated photonics" technology, he says. These shelf designs will be
less expensive than if Ciena integrated DWDM optics directly onto the
board, Zik continued. And in addition to the standard sparing-related
advantages, the pluggable devices also will simplify maintenance for
carriers, who will now only have to replace a transceiver if a line
goes down.
Beside
the desire to get the benefits of tunable pluggable transceivers into
the field, the availability of a second source also led Ciena to adopt
the non-standard form factor, Zik reveals. The supplier, whom Zik would
not identify, has not yet begun shipping modules but is not "too far
behind" Bookham, he says.
Zik
expects to be able to ship demonstration platforms using the new
modules to potential customers by the end of this year, with fieldable
systems following at the beginning of next year.
Ciena
is the first systems house to announce that it will use such devices.
LeMaitre declined to talk about specific conversations with other
platform vendors so as not to steal Ciena's thunder, but indicated that
he expects that the tunable pluggable market will settle on three or
four form factors -- in particular, XFP-E, XFP, and something bigger
than those modules along the lines of what Ciena will receive. He added
that a technology advancement will be necessary before module vendors
will be able to supply tunable XFPs or SFPs. This means initial
deployments will be in the XFP-E and larger formats. Bookham is
considering a tunable X2 module, LeMaitre added.
Zik
says that Ciena is comfortable with the current form factor and would
not be interested in switching to a more conventional size unless the
change provided a significant economic benefit. The availability of a
tunable XFP might fit that description, he indicated.
The
TL8000 features Bookham's tunable transmitter with an indium phosphide
Mach Zehnder modulator and DSDBR wideband tunable laser. The module
also includes the company's 10-Gbit/sec avalanche photodiode receiver
combined with electronic dispersion compensation to enable use in metro
and long-haul applications.
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