Paper
2 October 2006 FAST copper for broadband access
Mung Chiang, Jianwei Huang, Raphael Cendrillon, Chee Wei Tan, Dahai Xu
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 6390, Broadband Access Communication Technologies; 639003 (2006) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.684903
Event: Optics East 2006, 2006, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Abstract
FAST Copper is a multi-year, U.S. NSF funded project that started in 2004, and is jointly pursued by the research groups of Mung Chiang at Princeton University, John Cioffi at Stanford University, and Alexader Fraser at Fraser Research Lab, and in collaboration with several industrial partners including AT&T. The goal of the FAST Copper Project is to provide ubiquitous, 100 Mbps, fiber/DSL broadband access to everyone in the U.S. with a phone line. This goal will be achieved through two threads of research: dynamic and joint optimization of resources in Frequency, Amplitude, Space, and Time (thus the name 'FAST') to overcome the attenuation and crosstalk bottlenecks, and the integration of communication, networking, computation, modeling, and distributed information management and control for the multi-user twisted pair network.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Mung Chiang, Jianwei Huang, Raphael Cendrillon, Chee Wei Tan, and Dahai Xu "FAST copper for broadband access", Proc. SPIE 6390, Broadband Access Communication Technologies, 639003 (2 October 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.684903
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KEYWORDS
Copper

Statistical multiplexing

Multimedia

Algorithm development

Stochastic processes

Broadband telecommunications

Optimization (mathematics)

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