Abstract
Overview
ROADMs are systems that allow the very flexible, remote selection of
wavelengths transiting a given intermediate node on a fiber network for
dropping and/or adding. They allow access to any of the wavelengths going
through a node (or, in more limited ROADM implementations, access to a set of
the transiting wavelengths) for use of the data on the chosen wavelength and
the possibility of adding to, or modifying, the data on that wavelength for
transmitting it on to the next node(s). They also allow the interconnection of
multiple intersecting networks (multiple-degree nodes) at the optical level,
avoiding the expense and complexity of OEO conversions to achieve the
interconnection. The device offers the promise of substantial savings in
operations costs and many operational benefits.
Our first report on this subject “ROADMs - the Lightwave under
Control,” was issued in mid-2003 and opened with the following,
“In many ways, this is a report about a device that doesn' t exist; whose
technology is unselected; and whose market is very unclear. While a few of the
smaller DWDM system vendors do have a Reconfigurable Optical Add/Drop
Multiplexer (R-OADM) offering, none of the major vendors (90%, or so, of the
total market) have yet announced a product.” We have since written a
number of ROADM reports documenting every step of that technology
application' s progress. This report is part of a trilogy of reports we have
prepared to completely address different users' needs for information in the
ROADM area.
Now, not quite five years later, ROADMs are a standard on every major new
network and are rapidly being back-fitted into existing carrier networks. This
report enumerates the (very quick) steps we have taken to get to this point.
The real driver for ROADMs has been the desire to convert from a SONET-based
transport system to a wavelength-based one, while retaining the SONET control
capabilities. ROADMs have supplied the answer.
Continuing the trend, carriers are now interested in extending that control
capability to the ends of the network. The ever-increasing demand for
bandwidth at the ends of the network, mostly exemplified by the overwhelming
importance of video, make the extension of network control capabilities
inevitable.
This report details where the industry is in beginning the new ROADM
revolution, from the “Core to the Edge.” This revolution will
bring ROADMs to virtually every central office and head-end in the US, and in
many parts of the world. The forecasts included herein detail that expansion.
Report Features:
- Comprehensive coverage of the edge ROADM;
- One of the first reports to ever cover components for edge ROADMs -
includes application descriptions; quantity, price, and market forecasts;
vendors; and technologies;
- Full description of the forecasting methodology used in the report;
- Description of underlying technologies of edge ROADMs and how various
components are used;
- Exhaustive listing of vendors of edge ROADM components and systems;
- Vendors' lists and discussions, separated into component vendors and
system vendors, all highlighting most current products;
- Many vendors with comments by the author about market position;
- Extensive forecasts for edge ROADMs:
- By region (USA and World)
- By system quantities;
- Forecasts for ROADM components and subassemblies;
- Report has over 50 pages;
- Report has over 16 figures - drawings, tables, and graphs, all exclusive
to this report;
- By an author with extensive consulting experience in the field and the
author of many other major ROADM reports - Clifford R. Holliday;
- From the Lightwave Series of consistent, compatible reports on the new
Lightwave network.