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Structured cabling: Structured cabling Cat6's Home, 10G Can Wait
 
Growing deployment of bandwidth hungry applications is making Cat6 commonplace in India. 10G, however, is yet to pick momentum
 

 
Thursday, August 24, 2006

 

Indian businesses are in-creasingly deploying appli-cations such as video and multi-media streaming, driving demand for faster data rates. The use of business applications such as CRM, ERP, and SCM is also getting more widespread. Moreover, the concept of networked software and services is also gaining ground. New applications such as web conferen­cing that converge voice, data, and video are also growing in usage. No doubt all this is fueling the hunger for bandwidth among Indian companies. The demand for faster data rates that would help companies run new applications is growing.

Given all this, it's no surprise that Cat6 has become commonplace in India. “Cat6 has become quite common in India. It provides very good bandwidth and better connectivity than Cat5,” says Arindam Bose, Head-IT, LG Electronics. Deepak Konnur, IT Head, North Delhi Power Ltd (NDPL), pointed out that 90 percent of the enterprise networks are now coming on Cat6.

According to KR Krishna­kumar, VP-IT, Grasim Industries, even though the current Cat5 infrastructure can reasonably support the increasing compute power, storage requirements, and the traffic for every workstation, it would not be long before the growing end-users' demand pushes the traffic to the limits compelling an upgrade to Cat5 and beyond.

There are many reasons why Cat 6 is becoming the cabling standard of choice of Indian companies. NDPL's Konnur pointed out that Cat6 components are specified to be interoperable between different vendor's products and are fully backward compatible with all lower categories. Cat6 components from different vendors can be mixed and matched to form a minimally compliant Cat6 channel. Also Cat6 component can be substituted in any existing Cat5 or 5e channel to give Cat5 or 5e performance respectively.

Moreover, Cat6 components have the same nominal impedance of 100 Ohms as Cat5 and 5e components, but have a tighter tolerance on impedance variations. Cat6 provides better Bit Error Rate (BER) performance. “More frequently occurring bit errors means that expensive networking devices are caught in unproductive cycles of error detection and re-transmission resulting in accurately and rapidly transferring information that drives business and improves productivity,” Konnur pointed out.

Cat6 yields a bandwidth of 200 MHz at 20 degrees for the most demanding 100 meter channel configurations compared to a bandwidth of 100 MHz for Cat5/5e. Bose points out that the quality of Cat6 gives it an edge when used for outdoors. Christopher Stanley of ITC points out that Cat6 enables one to get access in hard to get connected places and through passive components standard, it influences active components on the standard.

10G comes calling
Even though 10G over copper or fiber is still a year before commercial deployments really start taking place; it has already started gaining attention in India. However, the main problem with 10G is that of standards. 10G standards are still a moving target. Moreover, only a small number of companies need the kind of throughput that 10G on copper brings to the table. Unless a company has its own data centres or SAN, it doesn't really need to invest in 10G.

Konnur says that 10G might take a couple of years to come to India. “Even though people in India are increasingly becoming aware of 10G and are deploying it in datacenters and for applications that require large bandwidth, if seen from the user perspective then we might not need 10G. Nevertheless 10G can be useful in case of our server consolidation,” he observed. Pointing out that the basic benefit that 10G provides is a higher bandwidth on copper, Konnur urged that applications that require voice transfer, data, broadband, and base band video can run on Cat6 so can applications for building management and security also require Cat6.

“Cat6 does not satisfy 10G compliance over the full channel distance. Moreover, as companies use their networks for voice, video and data by introducing more IP devices on the network, it leads to a demand for the next-generation ethernet technology,” Konnur emphasized.

ITC's Stanley is sure that in two years, 10G network would bring about a change in the core of cable changing. “Devices are being connected by throughput. The more the convergence of voice, data and video, higher the demand for bandwidth would be. The effective throughput would be may be million times more that what is today,” he said, adding that all this would have a cascading effect on phones, PDAs, and laptops.

Whether Cat6 or 10G, it's requirement is going to drive everything. At the moment, it seems Cat 6 would rule the roost in Indian enterprises at least for the next couple of years largely, because they don't need the kind of bandwidth that 10G supports. It is unlikely that Indian companies who have invested in Cat6 in the past couple of years would spend on another technology so soon.

Ravi Shekhar Pandey

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