janrinok writes:
Bell Labs has pumped
data faster than ever before down antiquated copper wiring [theregister.co.uk]. The boffins used a frequency modulation system that they claim will be perfect for hooking up aging telco cables to future broadband fiber networks. The technique is based on the
G.fast standard [theregister.co.uk] being considered by the International Telecommunications Union; it's a DSL standard designed to sustain 500Mbps connections over legacy copper cable networks using a 106MHz frequency range. The new Bell system, dubbed XG-FAST, increases the frequency range to 500MHz. We're told it can manage 10Gbps over a pair of copper cables 30 metres long, although speeds drops to 1Gbps of synchronous data over 70 meters.
"Our constant aim is to push the limits of what is possible to 'invent the future', with breakthroughs that are 10 times better than are possible today," said Marcus Weldon, president of Bell Labs. "Our demonstration of 10Gbps over copper is a prime example: by pushing broadband technology to its limits, operators can determine how they could deliver gigabit services over their existing networks, ensuring the availability of ultra-broadband access as widely and as economically as possible."
What's not clear is if Bell Labs can get even faster speeds over telco copper, but the team says that due to the limits of Shannon's Law (also known as the
Shannon-Hartley theorem [wikipedia.org]) this may not be possible.
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