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TRANSCRIPT
Jornadas Internacionales 2012 26-28 September 2012
www.mocalliance.org
Agenda
• Introduction of MoCA • Market forecasts for pay TV in Latin America • The connected home
• Integration of pay TV and MoCA • MoCA 1.1 and 2.0 highlights • Membership • Questions and answers
The Alliance
• Charter is to connect TVs using in-home coaxial cabling. • More than 110 certified products (STBs, ONTs, gateways,
routers, TV-to-Internet adapters, DVRs) • 55 members • Liaisons with US CableLabs and Korean CableLabs. • Liaison with HomePlug Powerline Alliance. • Incorporated into DLNA’s Interoperability Guidelines. • Included in IEEE P1905.1 • Proud member of CEDIA. • On retail shelves now (U.S. only)
Applications
• In-home backbone • Extension of wireless network • Multi-room DVR and content sharing • Smart/connected TVs • High-speed Internet • Gamers adding performance • Also appropriate for vertical markets such as hotels
adding broadband performance
Latin America Pay TV
Courtesy Rethink Technology Research
Latin America Pay TV Technology Projections
Courtesy Rethink Technology Research
Latin America Pay TV Penetration
Courtesy Rethink Technology Research
Argentina Pay TV Technology Projections
Courtesy Rethink Technology Research
Argentina 2011 Pay TV by Technology
Argentina 2015 Pay TV by Technology
Argentina Pay TV Growth
Courtesy Rethink Technology Research
Argentina Pay TV Projections
Courtesy Rethink Technology Research
Chile Pay TV Technology Projections
Courtesy Rethink Technology Research
Chile 2011 Pay TV by Technology
Chile 2015 Pay TV by Technology
Chile Pay TV Growth
Courtesy Rethink Technology Research
Chile Pay TV Projections
Courtesy Rethink Technology Research
The Connected Home
Connected Entertainment Devices
Courtesy Entropic Communications
Broadband GW/Router
MoCA Ethernet
WiFi
HD TV
STB
Bridge
WiFi Extender
Smart TV Adapter Game Console
Smart Phone
Tablet
Backbone
Value Proposition Drawbacks
Wireless (WiFi)
Mobility Reliability is a challenge Prone to interference Unlicensed band
Powerline (HomePlug)
Ubiquity of outlets Ease of use
Performance not on par with MoCA Prone to interference
Coax (MoCA)
Proven performance and reliability. In use by all three pay TV segments. MoCA 2.0 ratified—Interoperable with 1.0/1.1
Reliant on coaxial outlet penetration
The Connected Home
Mobility, ubiquity, ease of use and reliability
No silver bullets Still need a wire
The Connected Home Narrative
MoCA Technology Value Proposition
• No new wires. • Uses existing coax.
• Operates at higher frequency range • 500-1500MHZ • No interference with other technologies and mediums.
• Complementary to wireless. • In-home backbone extending wireless capability.
• Independent field tests validating all claims regarding high performance and high reliability. • 110 Mbps in 97 percent of all outlets • 250 homes in the US
Pay TV Operator Adoption and Interest
Only home entertainment networking standard in deployment by all three pay TV segments – cable, satellite and IPTV/telco – worldwide.
• All cable MSOs and satellite operators in the US, and Verizon and many smaller telcos.
• All cable MSOs in Canada • Interest from pay TV operators in Brazil • Trials in China and South Africa
MoCA 1.1
MoCA offers performance suited for transporting multimedia content
• Net Throughput = 175 Mb/s (MoCA 1.1) • Low Packet Loss Rate (< 1e-5) • Low Latency (< 10 ms) • Low Jitter (< 1 ms)
MoCA 2.0
• Two performance modes • Baseline Mode
• 400+ Mbps MAC throughput • 700 Mbps PHY Rate
• Single 100 MHz Channel • Enhanced Mode • 800+ Mbps MAC throughput • 1.4 Gbps PHY Rate • Two bonded 100 MHz Channels (“Channel Bonding”) • “Turbo” mode for a point-to-point configuration that allows • 500+ Mbps MAC throughput between two connected devices when
operating in Baseline mode • 1+ Gbps MAC throughput when operating in Enhanced mode.
MoCA 2.0
• Energy savings • Sleep and standby power modes • Address power consumption in entire network
• Backward interoperable with MoCA 1.0/1.1 • Protects investment in current equipment. • No firmware or swap out necessary.
• Enhanced reliability • One error packet in 100 million • 3.5 ms latency
• Expanded operating frequency from 500 – 1650 MHz
Board of Directors
Contributor Members
Associate Members
Summary
• The connected home is a blend of technologies and mediums providing mobility, ubiquity, ease of use and reliability. • TVs are the next device to be integrated into the digital
home. • MoCA connects TVs and other devices that access and
distribute HD video and programming. • Wireless is pervasive but you will still need a wire.
• For these video-centric devices and services, performance and reliability is critical.
• MoCA is the king of performance and reliability.
The Standard for Home Entertainment Networking