WO1998009438A1 - Subchannelization scheme for use in a broadband communication system - Google Patents

Subchannelization scheme for use in a broadband communication system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1998009438A1
WO1998009438A1 PCT/US1997/014990 US9714990W WO9809438A1 WO 1998009438 A1 WO1998009438 A1 WO 1998009438A1 US 9714990 W US9714990 W US 9714990W WO 9809438 A1 WO9809438 A1 WO 9809438A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
signal
client
signals
downconverter
upconverter
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1997/014990
Other languages
French (fr)
Original Assignee
Hybrid Networks, Inc.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Hybrid Networks, Inc. filed Critical Hybrid Networks, Inc.
Priority to AU40899/97A priority Critical patent/AU4089997A/en
Publication of WO1998009438A1 publication Critical patent/WO1998009438A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N7/00Television systems
    • H04N7/12Systems in which the television signal is transmitted via one channel or a plurality of parallel channels, the bandwidth of each channel being less than the bandwidth of the television signal
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L12/00Data switching networks
    • H04L12/28Data switching networks characterised by path configuration, e.g. LAN [Local Area Networks] or WAN [Wide Area Networks]
    • H04L12/2801Broadband local area networks
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N7/00Television systems
    • H04N7/16Analogue secrecy systems; Analogue subscription systems
    • H04N7/173Analogue secrecy systems; Analogue subscription systems with two-way working, e.g. subscriber sending a programme selection signal

Definitions

  • the present invention relates generally to subchannelization schemes in which a wide band data channel is segmented into plural narrow band subchannels, and more particularly, a method and apparatus for subchannelizing a standard television channel to permit data transfer over plural data channels of smaller bandwidth in a full-duplex, asymmetric hybrid network communication system.
  • a television channel carrier signal in a communication network for the transmission of digital data is known.
  • a cable modem for example, is one application of this technology.
  • the transmission of high speed digital data over a single television channel leaves the data carried on that channel very susceptible to interference and other noise which tend to degrade the quality of data being transmitted.
  • the data rate of a network receiving such transmissions does not necessarily match the maximum available data rate of the television channel and thus special hardware may be required to efficiently utilize the full bandwidth. Due to the proliferation of the Internet and intranets and an ever increasing demand for higher data throughput by client devices connected to such networks, methods and apparatuses for increasing quality throughput and reducing error rates are desirable.
  • the present invention provides a method and apparatus for increasing the quality throughput of data transmitted in a network over a standard television channel and for providing an efficient scheme for subdividing the television channel into plural subchannels of data rates that match the data rate of the network to which client devices are connected.
  • By subdividing a standard television channel one can reduce the overall effect of noise ingress, near-end cross talk, intermodulation, and sensitivity to frequency response on the client devices receiving data over the television channel .
  • a further object of the present invention is to reduce the effect of near-end cross talk on clients receiving data in a network over a standard television channel.
  • Another object of the present invention is to reduce the effect of intermodulation on clients receiving data in a network over a standard television channel.
  • a further object of the present invention is to reduce the effect of sensitivity to frequency response variations on clients receiving data in a network over a standard television channel.
  • a further object of the present invention is to improve the bit error rate of standard television channels used for transmission of digital data.
  • a further object of an embodiment of the present invention is to provide a data subchannel of a standard television channel whose throughput is approximately equal to the Ethernet lOMbit/sec standard.
  • FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a channel divider according to an embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a data recovery device according to an embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a channel divider according to another embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a block diagram of a data recovery device according to another embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 5 is a block diagram of a hybrid access system in which the channelizer of the present invention may be employed;
  • FIG. 6a is a block diagram of a hybrid access system point of presence (POP) in which the channelizer of the present invention may be employed;
  • POP point of presence
  • FIG. 6b is a block diagram of a downstream router
  • FIG. 6c is a block diagram of an upstream router
  • FIGs. 7a, b and c are block diagrams of a hybrid access system depicting upstream channels and high speed downstream links to respective client devices in which an embodiment of the present invention is employed.
  • FIG. 1 depicts a three-way channelizer in which a broadband television channel (6Mhz wide in the United States) is subdivided into three 2Mhz data channels.
  • the channelization schemes may also be altered to accommodate 8 Mhz channels utilized in Europe and elsewhere.
  • three digital data serial streams each of preferably about lOMbits/sec, e.g., a conventional lOBaseT LAN data rate, are input into three modulators lOlA-C.
  • the modulators use a common clock to modulate three data input streams by quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) .
  • QAM quadrature amplitude modulation
  • Other forms of modulation such as vestigial side band ⁇ e.g., 4VSB or 8VSB modulation
  • 64QAM modulation provides a data throughput of about 1.536 or 1.648 megasymbols per second per subchannel.
  • each of the modulated data streams are low pass filtered by filters 102A-C.
  • Filters 102A-C are preferably elliptically-shaped Butterworth filters having 7 or 9 poles and a cut-off frequency of about 2.5MHz.
  • the three filtered signals are then upconverted in upconverters 103A-C using conventional techniques.
  • the upconverters 103A-C upconvert the signals to intermediate frequency (IF) signals centered about 42MHz (subchannel A), 44MHz (subchannel B) and 46MHz (subchannel C) , respectively.
  • IF intermediate frequency
  • the reason that the data streams are modulated and later upconverted is that present circuit limitations prevent direct modulation using 64QAM. It is to be understood that the scope of the present invention does not exclude direct QAM modulation to intermediate frequencies (IF) for further conditioning and processing by standard television components.
  • IF filters 104A-C are 2MHz wide surface-acoustic-wave (SAW) filters.
  • IF filter 106 The output of IF filter 106 is supplied to upconverter 107 where the IF composite signal is upconverted again using techniques common to standard television signals.
  • a specific subchannel is defined by the tuned frequency of tuner 111.
  • the incoming RF signals are supplied to the tuner 111 in which a specific 2Mhz television subchannel frequency is selected (or tuned) .
  • tuner 111 may tune to the RF frequency of 55MHz, representing subchannel A of television channel 2. That signal is then downconverted to an IF frequency centered at 44MHz in downconverter 112 and run through an IF filter 113, preferably one matching IF filters 104A-C in FIG. 1.
  • the filtered signal is then downconverted at downconverter 115 to baseband and filtered again at filter 116 preferably using a filter matching filters 102A-C used on the modulating end.
  • the digital data is then recovered from the baseband signal in data recovery circuit 117 using conventional techniques such as baseband sampling at four, eight or sixteen times the symbol rate.
  • three digital data serial streams preferably each utilizing the same clock signal, are input into three modulators 121A-C.
  • These modulators 121A-C vestigial sideband modulate (VSB) the three input data streams by carriers of 42.950MHz, 44.950MHz and 46.950MHz, respectively.
  • VSB vestigial sideband modulate
  • any other acceptable form of modulation may be used.
  • IF filters 124A-C are 2MHz wide surface-acoustic-wave (SAW) filters.
  • IF filter 126 The output of IF filter 126 is fed to upconverter 127 where the IF composite signal is upconverted again using conventional techniques to a common television channel carrier frequency.
  • the data then flows to a client over a specific subchannel.
  • the incoming RF signals are fed into a tuner 131 in which a specific television subchannel frequency is selected. That signal is then downconverted to an IF frequency centered at 44MHz in downconverter 132 and run through an IF filter 133, preferably one matching IF filters 124A-C in FIG. 3.
  • the filtered signal is then fed to synchronous detector 135 followed by low pass filter 136.
  • Filter 136 is preferably an elliptically-shaped Butterworth filter with 7 or 9 poles and a cut-off frequency of about 2.5MHz.
  • the digital data is then recovered from the baseband signal in data recovery circuit 137 using conventional techniques, such as sampling at two times the symbol rate.
  • FIG. 5 is a detailed schematic drawing of a hybrid access system 1 in which the subchannelizer and data recovery device is employed respectively at the cable television headend 28 and a the remote link adapters 29 in order to permit subdividing a standard 6 Mhz channel transmitted from headend 28 into three 2 Mhz subchannels that are conveyed over a high speed downstream channel to plural remote like adapters 29.
  • the subchannelizer and data recovery device is employed respectively at the cable television headend 28 and a the remote link adapters 29 in order to permit subdividing a standard 6 Mhz channel transmitted from headend 28 into three 2 Mhz subchannels that are conveyed over a high speed downstream channel to plural remote like adapters 29.
  • Hybrid access system 1 includes hybrid access system (HAS) points of presence (POPs) 26 and other points of presence 27.
  • HAS POPs 26 include individual HAS POPs 26 (l)-26(3) which enable communication over a broadband network, either by upstream and downstream cable communications or by downstream cable and upstream telephone communications or various other hybrid configurations (e.g., wireless or satellite) .
  • a hybrid access system utilizing the present invention may include: (1) a hybrid access configuration which uses downstream cable television subchannels and upstream public switch telephone network (PSTN) , wireless RF communications or integrated services digital network (ISDN) telephone lines; (2) a hybrid access configuration which uses downstream wireless television subchannels and upstream public switch telephone network (PSTN), wireless RF communications or integrated services digital network (ISDN) telephone lines; (3) a hybrid access configuration which uses both downstream and upstream cable television subchannels; (4) a hybrid access configuration which uses both downstream and upstream wireless television subchannels; and (5) a hybrid access configuration with downstream satellite television subchannels and upstream PSTN, wireless RF communications or ISDN telephone channels.
  • PSTN public switch telephone network
  • ISDN integrated services digital network
  • Backbone network 20 such as the Internet which includes a plurality of Internet serves 20 connected to HAS POPs 26 each including a plurality of host computers and/or servers, collectively referred to as hybrid servers.
  • Hybrid access system 1 further includes broadcast units such as, a cable television headend 28, independent upstream channels 28, and RLA 29.
  • broadcast units such as, a cable television headend 28, independent upstream channels 28, and RLA 29.
  • U.S. Patent No. 5,347,304 (1994) assigned to Hybrid Networks, Inc., describing an example of an RLA, is hereby expressly referenced and incorporated herein in its entirety.
  • An RLA may receive analog broadcast signals including encoded digital information which the RLA decodes and provides to a data terminal or computer.
  • the downstream flow of information proceeds from HAS POPs 26(1) -26(3) through cable television headend or television transmitters 28 through television subchannels or cell sites 30 and through RLA and client workstation 29.
  • Upstream information flow proceeds in one case from RLA and client workstation 29 through independent upstream channels 28 to HASPOP 26(1) and then to backbone network 20 along TI or T3 or other digital lines.
  • upstream information proceeds from client workstation through RLA 29 through the cable television network, and cable television headend 28 to hybrid access system point of presence and then through TI, T3, or other digital lines to backbone network 20.
  • the outputs of the cable television headends or television transmitters 28 include pluralities of high speed downstream broadband radio frequency (RF) subchannels connected to respective remote clients 29.
  • Hybrid access system 1 further includes a plurality of cell sites 30 connected through high speed links to a corresponding hybrid access system point of presence 5.
  • the outputs of cell sites 30 include pluralities of high speed downstream broadband subchannels connected to selected remote clients 29.
  • a particular remote client 29 can be connected via an independent lower speed upstream channel to a hybrid access system point of presence 26 as discussed below or via a similar independent lower speed upstream channel to another point of presence system 27. By lower speed it is meant as a speed reduced from the speed of the high speed link used to transmit information downstream.
  • a particular hybrid access system point of presence 5 can be connected via duplex high speed links to a plurality of cable television headends or television transmitters, to a plurality of cell sites 30, or a combination of cable television headends or television transmitters 28 and cell sites 30.
  • FIG. 6a is a schematic drawing of a point of presence (POP) system 26(1) according to the present invention, including host computers or servers 39 and a POP local area network, i.e., LAN switch 33 to which host computers or servers 39 are connected. Further connected to LAN switch 33 are one or more downstream and one or more upstream hybrid access system point of presence routers, respectively 34 and 35, one or more dial-up routers 36, a network management system 37, and conventional routers 38. Connected to POP LAN switch 33 are one or more data storage elements or systems (not shown) . Each downstream hybrid access system point of presence router 34 is connected with a high speed link to a television transmitter or cable television headend for transmission of data over television subchannels, for example.
  • POP point of presence
  • each upstream hybrid access system point of presence router 35 is connected to a plurality of independent upstream channels, which operate at a lower speed than the downstream high speed links to television transmitters or cable television headends.
  • Each dial-up router 36 is connected to a plurality of independent upstream channels operating at a lower speed than the indicated downstream high speed links.
  • Each conventional router 38 is connected along a high speed line to wide area network (WAN) lines to selected information providers, Internet, or other nodes or businesses.
  • POP LAN switch 33 may be connected directly along a high speed line to wide area network (WAN) lines to selected information providers, Internet, or other nodes or businesses.
  • FIG. 6b is a block diagram of hybrid downstream router 34 for use with the present invention.
  • downstream router 34 includes network interface 34a, link interface 34F, and network interface 34g.
  • Downstream router 34 and physical interface 34e are connected to POP LAN switch
  • controller 34d is connected directly to each of physical interface 34e and link interface 34f along indicated lines to accomplish control and messaging functions.
  • Downstream router 34 and physical interface 34c are connected to cable television headends, television broadcast sites, cell cites or the like, to communicate information primarily or exclusively in a unidirectional or downstream direction over television subchannels, and physical interface 34c, link interface 34b, and network interface 34a are serially connected to each other and to controller 34d for selected communication of selected information. Additionally, controller 34d is connected directly to each of physical interface 34c and link interface 34b along indicated lines to accomplish control and messaging functions.
  • Downstream router 34 and physical interface 34c are connected to cable television headends, television broadcast sites, cell cites or the like, to communicate information primarily or exclusively in a unidirectional or downstream direction over television subchannels, and physical interface 34c, link interface 34b, and network interface 34a are serially connected to each other and to controller 34d for selected communication of selected information. Additionally, controller 34d is connected directly to each of physical interface 34c and link interface
  • Router 34 may include one or more of physical interfaces 34c.
  • Router 34 may be a bridge without network interfaces 34a and 34g or a connection without network interfaces 34a and 34g and without link interfaces 34b and 34f.
  • Router 34 can also be a gateway.
  • FIG. 6c is a block diagram of upstream router 35 for use with the present invention.
  • upstream router 35 includes network interface 35a, link interface 35b, physical interface 35c, controller 35d, physical interface 35e, link interface 35f, and network interface 35g.
  • Upstream router 35 and physical interface 35e are connected to POP LAN switch 33 for sending and receiving information, and physical interface 35e, link interface 35f, and network interface 35g are serially connected to each other and to controller 35d for bi-directional communication of selected information.
  • controller 35d is connected directly to each other physical interface 35e and link interface 35f along indicated lines to accomplish control and messaging functions.
  • Upstream router 35 and physical interface 35c are connected to upstream channels, e.g.
  • Upstream router 35 may include one or more of physical interfaces 35c.
  • Router 35 may be a bridge without network interfaces 35a and 35g or a connection without network interfaces 35a and 35g and without link interfaces 35b and 35f. Router 35 can also be a gateway.
  • FIGS 7a-c are drawings of a hybrid access system 1 in which a remote client having a workstation 2 is connected to LAN 61, as shown respectively in Figures 7b and 7c, can communicate with a selected information provider 21 including LAN 50, bridge or router 51 connected to LAN 50, and dial-up router 52 connected to LAN 50 through a hybrid access system point of presence 5.
  • HAS POP 5 is connected along a high speed link to bridge or router 51.
  • HAS POP 5 is linked to other information providers to receive selected information items.
  • dial-up router 52 is connected to a plurality of upstream channels.
  • Figure 7b and 7c additionally show respective first and second clients, in one case including workstation 2 which includes RLA 60 and in the other instance including RLA 60 and a local area network (LAN) 61 connected to RLA 60.
  • First client 29(1) is connected to an upstream channel from client workstation 2
  • second client 29(2) is connected to an upstream channel directly from RLA 60.
  • RLA 60 receives input information, particularly radio frequency (RF) information along one of respective input subchannels connected thereto.
  • RF radio frequency
  • channel impairments By utilizing the present invention, the effects of channel impairments on a television channel utilized for transfer of high speed digital data can be dramatically improved. Without the use of the invention, channel impairments such as noise ingress, near-end cross talk, composite intermodulation, and poor frequency response can severely restrict the usable throughput on a channel.
  • noise ingress tends to have a narrow band effect.
  • the ingress affects one of the subchannels rather than the entire channel.
  • CW continuous wave
  • the effects of near-end cross talk are reduced.
  • Near-end cross talk interference which appears as a continuous wave (CW) interferer, will also fall within one subchannel.
  • sensitivity to intermodulation such as the composite second order or the composite triple beat, caused by nonlinearity in distribution amplifiers is improved.
  • the main intermod impact is also placed in one of the subchannels.
  • the same IF filter that would be utilized for data on a channel is utilized for data on the subchannel.
  • the filter effectiveness will be increased by the ratio of the channel size to the subchannel size.
  • the filter effectiveness would be increased threefold. This increase in effectiveness will yield better channel shaping and more effective cancellation of channel impairments. So not only would a smaller number of clients be affected by the channel impairments due to the containment of the impairments within single subchannels, the channel impairments would be better canceled.
  • subchannels Another benefit of the use of subchannels is that the data rate approximately matches the lOMbit/sec standard Ethernet data rate. If subchannels are not used, special cards are needed to create a 30Mbit/sec network.
  • any standard television channel could be subdivided (such as a European 8MHz channel) and can be subdivided into any size subchannel.
  • subchannels need not be of uniform bandwidth.
  • a 6MHz channel could be broken down into a 4MHz subchannel and a 2MHz subchannel.
  • all channels do not need to be subdivided into subchannels.
  • the bit error rate tester was then connected to a channel divider utilizing 64QAM according to the present invention. Three data streams of lOMbit/sec each were then fed into the respective inputs of the channel divider according to the present invention (as shown in FIG. 1) and one of those bit streams was recovered at a simulated client (as shown in FIG. 2) . This test was repeated for each of the three data streams. Under this test of the utilization of subchannels, bit errors in the range of 1x10-8 were experienced.

Abstract

An RF signal processing circuit and method for subchannelizing a broadband data channel into plural narrow band subchannels. In particular, the circuit and method functions to subchannelize a standard television channel to permit data transfer over plural subchannels of smaller bandwidth in a two-way asymmetric network communication system.

Description

SUBCHANNELIZATION SCHEME FOR USE IN A BROADBAND COMMUNICATION SYSTEM
The present invention relates generally to subchannelization schemes in which a wide band data channel is segmented into plural narrow band subchannels, and more particularly, a method and apparatus for subchannelizing a standard television channel to permit data transfer over plural data channels of smaller bandwidth in a full-duplex, asymmetric hybrid network communication system.
BACKGROUND ART
The use of a television channel carrier signal in a communication network for the transmission of digital data is known. A cable modem, for example, is one application of this technology. However, the transmission of high speed digital data over a single television channel leaves the data carried on that channel very susceptible to interference and other noise which tend to degrade the quality of data being transmitted. Moreover, the data rate of a network receiving such transmissions does not necessarily match the maximum available data rate of the television channel and thus special hardware may be required to efficiently utilize the full bandwidth. Due to the proliferation of the Internet and intranets and an ever increasing demand for higher data throughput by client devices connected to such networks, methods and apparatuses for increasing quality throughput and reducing error rates are desirable.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides a method and apparatus for increasing the quality throughput of data transmitted in a network over a standard television channel and for providing an efficient scheme for subdividing the television channel into plural subchannels of data rates that match the data rate of the network to which client devices are connected. By subdividing a standard television channel one can reduce the overall effect of noise ingress, near-end cross talk, intermodulation, and sensitivity to frequency response on the client devices receiving data over the television channel .
It is thus an object of the present invention to reduce the effect of noise ingress on clients receiving data in a network over a standard television channel.
A further object of the present invention is to reduce the effect of near-end cross talk on clients receiving data in a network over a standard television channel.
Another object of the present invention is to reduce the effect of intermodulation on clients receiving data in a network over a standard television channel.
A further object of the present invention is to reduce the effect of sensitivity to frequency response variations on clients receiving data in a network over a standard television channel.
A further object of the present invention is to improve the bit error rate of standard television channels used for transmission of digital data.
A further object of an embodiment of the present invention is to provide a data subchannel of a standard television channel whose throughput is approximately equal to the Ethernet lOMbit/sec standard.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
These and other objects and advantages of this invention will become more apparent and more readily appreciated by reference to the description of the preferred embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, of which:
FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a channel divider according to an embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a data recovery device according to an embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a channel divider according to another embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 4 is a block diagram of a data recovery device according to another embodiment of the present invention; FIG. 5 is a block diagram of a hybrid access system in which the channelizer of the present invention may be employed;
FIG. 6a is a block diagram of a hybrid access system point of presence (POP) in which the channelizer of the present invention may be employed;
FIG. 6b is a block diagram of a downstream router;
FIG. 6c is a block diagram of an upstream router;
FIGs. 7a, b and c are block diagrams of a hybrid access system depicting upstream channels and high speed downstream links to respective client devices in which an embodiment of the present invention is employed.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The present invention will be better understood by reference to the accompanying drawings.
FIG. 1 depicts a three-way channelizer in which a broadband television channel (6Mhz wide in the United States) is subdivided into three 2Mhz data channels. The channelization schemes may also be altered to accommodate 8 Mhz channels utilized in Europe and elsewhere. As shown, three digital data serial streams, each of preferably about lOMbits/sec, e.g., a conventional lOBaseT LAN data rate, are input into three modulators lOlA-C. Preferably, the modulators use a common clock to modulate three data input streams by quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) . Other forms of modulation, such as vestigial side band {e.g., 4VSB or 8VSB modulation) , may be used. 64QAM modulation, however, provides a data throughput of about 1.536 or 1.648 megasymbols per second per subchannel.
After modulation, each of the modulated data streams are low pass filtered by filters 102A-C. Filters 102A-C are preferably elliptically-shaped Butterworth filters having 7 or 9 poles and a cut-off frequency of about 2.5MHz.
The three filtered signals are then upconverted in upconverters 103A-C using conventional techniques. In the case of 64QAM modulation, the upconverters 103A-C upconvert the signals to intermediate frequency (IF) signals centered about 42MHz (subchannel A), 44MHz (subchannel B) and 46MHz (subchannel C) , respectively. The reason that the data streams are modulated and later upconverted is that present circuit limitations prevent direct modulation using 64QAM. It is to be understood that the scope of the present invention does not exclude direct QAM modulation to intermediate frequencies (IF) for further conditioning and processing by standard television components.
The resulting IF signals are then filtered by IF filters 104A-C. Preferably the IF filters 104A-C are 2MHz wide surface-acoustic-wave (SAW) filters.
The resulting signals on the respective channels are then combined in adder 105 and again IF filtered by IF filter 106. The output of IF filter 106 is supplied to upconverter 107 where the IF composite signal is upconverted again using techniques common to standard television signals.
Referring now to the data recovery circuit of Fig. 2 located at a receiving end of a data transmission, it is seen that data received from the network flows to a client over a specific subchannel. The particular subchannel is defined by the tuned frequency of tuner 111. The incoming RF signals are supplied to the tuner 111 in which a specific 2Mhz television subchannel frequency is selected (or tuned) . For instance, tuner 111 may tune to the RF frequency of 55MHz, representing subchannel A of television channel 2. That signal is then downconverted to an IF frequency centered at 44MHz in downconverter 112 and run through an IF filter 113, preferably one matching IF filters 104A-C in FIG. 1.
The filtered signal is then downconverted at downconverter 115 to baseband and filtered again at filter 116 preferably using a filter matching filters 102A-C used on the modulating end. The digital data is then recovered from the baseband signal in data recovery circuit 117 using conventional techniques such as baseband sampling at four, eight or sixteen times the symbol rate. In FIG. 3, under another embodiment of the present invention, three digital data serial streams preferably each utilizing the same clock signal, are input into three modulators 121A-C. These modulators 121A-C vestigial sideband modulate (VSB) the three input data streams by carriers of 42.950MHz, 44.950MHz and 46.950MHz, respectively. Preferably, 4VSB is utilized. However, any other acceptable form of modulation may be used.
The resulting IF signals are then IF filtered in IF filters 124A-C. Preferably the IF filters 124A-C are 2MHz wide surface-acoustic-wave (SAW) filters.
The resulting signals are then combined in adder 125 and again IF filtered in IF filter 126. The output of IF filter 126 is fed to upconverter 127 where the IF composite signal is upconverted again using conventional techniques to a common television channel carrier frequency.
Referring now to FIG. 4, on the receiving end the data then flows to a client over a specific subchannel. The incoming RF signals are fed into a tuner 131 in which a specific television subchannel frequency is selected. That signal is then downconverted to an IF frequency centered at 44MHz in downconverter 132 and run through an IF filter 133, preferably one matching IF filters 124A-C in FIG. 3.
The filtered signal is then fed to synchronous detector 135 followed by low pass filter 136. Filter 136 is preferably an elliptically-shaped Butterworth filter with 7 or 9 poles and a cut-off frequency of about 2.5MHz. The digital data is then recovered from the baseband signal in data recovery circuit 137 using conventional techniques, such as sampling at two times the symbol rate.
It is to be understood that data may be transmitted from a client to a television headend facility utilizing a television subchannel as well by modulating (as described above) a single data bit stream for transmission over a subchannel frequency. Figure 5 is a detailed schematic drawing of a hybrid access system 1 in which the subchannelizer and data recovery device is employed respectively at the cable television headend 28 and a the remote link adapters 29 in order to permit subdividing a standard 6 Mhz channel transmitted from headend 28 into three 2 Mhz subchannels that are conveyed over a high speed downstream channel to plural remote like adapters 29. Fig. 5 shows a remote link adapter (RLA) and client workstation 29 connected through hybrid access system 1 to a variety of entities connected to a backbone network 20 such as Internet, including information providers 21, corporations 22, government agencies 23, universities 24, and others 25. A backbone network is one which is typically not directly connected to a client. Hybrid access system 1 includes hybrid access system (HAS) points of presence (POPs) 26 and other points of presence 27. HAS POPs 26 include individual HAS POPs 26 (l)-26(3) which enable communication over a broadband network, either by upstream and downstream cable communications or by downstream cable and upstream telephone communications or various other hybrid configurations (e.g., wireless or satellite) . A hybrid access system utilizing the present invention may include: (1) a hybrid access configuration which uses downstream cable television subchannels and upstream public switch telephone network (PSTN) , wireless RF communications or integrated services digital network (ISDN) telephone lines; (2) a hybrid access configuration which uses downstream wireless television subchannels and upstream public switch telephone network (PSTN), wireless RF communications or integrated services digital network (ISDN) telephone lines; (3) a hybrid access configuration which uses both downstream and upstream cable television subchannels; (4) a hybrid access configuration which uses both downstream and upstream wireless television subchannels; and (5) a hybrid access configuration with downstream satellite television subchannels and upstream PSTN, wireless RF communications or ISDN telephone channels. Backbone network 20 such as the Internet which includes a plurality of Internet serves 20 connected to HAS POPs 26 each including a plurality of host computers and/or servers, collectively referred to as hybrid servers. Hybrid access system 1 further includes broadcast units such as, a cable television headend 28, independent upstream channels 28, and RLA 29. U.S. Patent No. 5,347,304 (1994) assigned to Hybrid Networks, Inc., describing an example of an RLA, is hereby expressly referenced and incorporated herein in its entirety. An RLA may receive analog broadcast signals including encoded digital information which the RLA decodes and provides to a data terminal or computer. According to an embodiment of the present invention, the downstream flow of information proceeds from HAS POPs 26(1) -26(3) through cable television headend or television transmitters 28 through television subchannels or cell sites 30 and through RLA and client workstation 29. Upstream information flow proceeds in one case from RLA and client workstation 29 through independent upstream channels 28 to HASPOP 26(1) and then to backbone network 20 along TI or T3 or other digital lines. In another case, upstream information proceeds from client workstation through RLA 29 through the cable television network, and cable television headend 28 to hybrid access system point of presence and then through TI, T3, or other digital lines to backbone network 20. The outputs of the cable television headends or television transmitters 28 include pluralities of high speed downstream broadband radio frequency (RF) subchannels connected to respective remote clients 29. Hybrid access system 1 further includes a plurality of cell sites 30 connected through high speed links to a corresponding hybrid access system point of presence 5. The outputs of cell sites 30 include pluralities of high speed downstream broadband subchannels connected to selected remote clients 29. A particular remote client 29 can be connected via an independent lower speed upstream channel to a hybrid access system point of presence 26 as discussed below or via a similar independent lower speed upstream channel to another point of presence system 27. By lower speed it is meant as a speed reduced from the speed of the high speed link used to transmit information downstream. A particular hybrid access system point of presence 5 can be connected via duplex high speed links to a plurality of cable television headends or television transmitters, to a plurality of cell sites 30, or a combination of cable television headends or television transmitters 28 and cell sites 30.
Figure 6a is a schematic drawing of a point of presence (POP) system 26(1) according to the present invention, including host computers or servers 39 and a POP local area network, i.e., LAN switch 33 to which host computers or servers 39 are connected. Further connected to LAN switch 33 are one or more downstream and one or more upstream hybrid access system point of presence routers, respectively 34 and 35, one or more dial-up routers 36, a network management system 37, and conventional routers 38. Connected to POP LAN switch 33 are one or more data storage elements or systems (not shown) . Each downstream hybrid access system point of presence router 34 is connected with a high speed link to a television transmitter or cable television headend for transmission of data over television subchannels, for example. Further, each upstream hybrid access system point of presence router 35 is connected to a plurality of independent upstream channels, which operate at a lower speed than the downstream high speed links to television transmitters or cable television headends. Each dial-up router 36 is connected to a plurality of independent upstream channels operating at a lower speed than the indicated downstream high speed links. Each conventional router 38 is connected along a high speed line to wide area network (WAN) lines to selected information providers, Internet, or other nodes or businesses. POP LAN switch 33 may be connected directly along a high speed line to wide area network (WAN) lines to selected information providers, Internet, or other nodes or businesses.
Figure 6b is a block diagram of hybrid downstream router 34 for use with the present invention. In particular, downstream router 34 includes network interface 34a, link interface 34F, and network interface 34g. Downstream router 34 and physical interface 34e are connected to POP LAN switch
33 for sending and receiving information, and physical interface 34e, link interface 34f, and network interface 34g are serially connected to each other and to controller 34d for bi-directional communication of selected information. Additionally, controller 34d is connected directly to each of physical interface 34e and link interface 34f along indicated lines to accomplish control and messaging functions. Downstream router 34 and physical interface 34c are connected to cable television headends, television broadcast sites, cell cites or the like, to communicate information primarily or exclusively in a unidirectional or downstream direction over television subchannels, and physical interface 34c, link interface 34b, and network interface 34a are serially connected to each other and to controller 34d for selected communication of selected information. Additionally, controller 34d is connected directly to each of physical interface 34c and link interface 34b along indicated lines to accomplish control and messaging functions. Downstream router
34 may include one or more of physical interfaces 34c. Router 34 may be a bridge without network interfaces 34a and 34g or a connection without network interfaces 34a and 34g and without link interfaces 34b and 34f. Router 34 can also be a gateway.
Figure 6c is a block diagram of upstream router 35 for use with the present invention. In particular, upstream router 35 includes network interface 35a, link interface 35b, physical interface 35c, controller 35d, physical interface 35e, link interface 35f, and network interface 35g. Upstream router 35 and physical interface 35e are connected to POP LAN switch 33 for sending and receiving information, and physical interface 35e, link interface 35f, and network interface 35g are serially connected to each other and to controller 35d for bi-directional communication of selected information. Additionally, controller 35d is connected directly to each other physical interface 35e and link interface 35f along indicated lines to accomplish control and messaging functions. Upstream router 35 and physical interface 35c are connected to upstream channels, e.g. telephone links for example, to communicate information primarily or exclusively in a unidirectional or upstream direction, and physical interface 35c, link interface 35b, and network interface 35a are serially connected to each other and to controller 35d for selected communication of selected information. Additionally, controller 35d is connected directly to each of physical interfaces 35c and link interface 35b along indicated lines to accomplish control and messaging functions. Upstream router 35 may include one or more of physical interfaces 35c. Router 35 may be a bridge without network interfaces 35a and 35g or a connection without network interfaces 35a and 35g and without link interfaces 35b and 35f. Router 35 can also be a gateway. Figures 7a-c are drawings of a hybrid access system 1 in which a remote client having a workstation 2 is connected to LAN 61, as shown respectively in Figures 7b and 7c, can communicate with a selected information provider 21 including LAN 50, bridge or router 51 connected to LAN 50, and dial-up router 52 connected to LAN 50 through a hybrid access system point of presence 5. Further, HAS POP 5 is connected along a high speed link to bridge or router 51. Additionally, HAS POP 5 is linked to other information providers to receive selected information items. Furthermore, dial-up router 52 is connected to a plurality of upstream channels. Figure 7b and 7c additionally show respective first and second clients, in one case including workstation 2 which includes RLA 60 and in the other instance including RLA 60 and a local area network (LAN) 61 connected to RLA 60. First client 29(1) is connected to an upstream channel from client workstation 2, and second client 29(2) is connected to an upstream channel directly from RLA 60. In the case of each client, RLA 60 receives input information, particularly radio frequency (RF) information along one of respective input subchannels connected thereto.
By utilizing the present invention, the effects of channel impairments on a television channel utilized for transfer of high speed digital data can be dramatically improved. Without the use of the invention, channel impairments such as noise ingress, near-end cross talk, composite intermodulation, and poor frequency response can severely restrict the usable throughput on a channel.
Testing has shown significant improvements through the use of the present invention. However, it is to be understood that use of subchannels requires the use of more filters at the modulating end and thus a slight loss in overall throughput. Although there is this minor loss of throughput for use of the present invention, there is a tremendous gain in performance.
For instance, noise ingress tends to have a narrow band effect. By dividing a wider spectrum into plural subchannels, the ingress affects one of the subchannels rather than the entire channel. Thus, a smaller number of clients will have their performance degraded by ingress. Similarly, the effects of near-end cross talk are reduced. Near-end cross talk interference, which appears as a continuous wave (CW) interferer, will also fall within one subchannel. Furthermore, sensitivity to intermodulation, such as the composite second order or the composite triple beat, caused by nonlinearity in distribution amplifiers is improved. By dividing a wider broadband channel into plural broadband subchannels, the main intermod impact is also placed in one of the subchannels.
Preferably the same IF filter that would be utilized for data on a channel is utilized for data on the subchannel. If the same filter is utilized, the filter effectiveness will be increased by the ratio of the channel size to the subchannel size. Thus, if a 6MHz channel was divided into 2MHz subchannels, the filter effectiveness would be increased threefold. This increase in effectiveness will yield better channel shaping and more effective cancellation of channel impairments. So not only would a smaller number of clients be affected by the channel impairments due to the containment of the impairments within single subchannels, the channel impairments would be better canceled.
Another benefit of the use of subchannels is that the data rate approximately matches the lOMbit/sec standard Ethernet data rate. If subchannels are not used, special cards are needed to create a 30Mbit/sec network.
Although the examples and embodiments discussed herein utilize a 6 MHz television channel being broken down into three 2MHz subchannels, any standard television channel could be subdivided (such as a European 8MHz channel) and can be subdivided into any size subchannel. Furthermore, subchannels need not be of uniform bandwidth. For example, a 6MHz channel could be broken down into a 4MHz subchannel and a 2MHz subchannel. Additionally, all channels do not need to be subdivided into subchannels.
EXAMPLES
A test was conducted in which a bit error rate tester was connected to a 64QAM modulator. A 30Mbit/sec digital data stream was then passed through the modulator and upconverted to an RF signal. The RF signal was then downconverted and demodulated at a simulated client. Bit errors in the range of 1x10-5 were experienced. The bit error rate tester was then connected to a channel divider utilizing 64QAM according to the present invention. Three data streams of lOMbit/sec each were then fed into the respective inputs of the channel divider according to the present invention (as shown in FIG. 1) and one of those bit streams was recovered at a simulated client (as shown in FIG. 2) . This test was repeated for each of the three data streams. Under this test of the utilization of subchannels, bit errors in the range of 1x10-8 were experienced.
The same tests were repeated utilizing 4VSB for the modulation scheme (as shown in FIGS. 3 and 4) with similar results. Thus, a dramatic improvement in bit error rate was achieved through the use of the present invention.

Claims

1. A channel dividing apparatus for use with a high speed, digital network utilizing at least one television channel for transmission of data to at least one client, said apparatus comprising: a plurality of modulators, said modulators each modulating a respective digital data stream into a modulated signal; a radio frequency (RF) upconverter, said RF upconverter upconverting said modulated signals to RF signals residing on a standard television channel, said RF signals each defining a subchannel .
2. An apparatus as in claim 1, wherein said plurality of subchannels are each approximately 2 MHz in bandwidth.
3. An apparatus as in claim 1, wherein a bit rate of each of said respective digital data streams is approximately lOMbits/sec.
4. An apparatus as in claim 1, wherein said plurality of modulators quadrature amplitude modulate said digital data streams .
5. An apparatus as in claim 4, wherein said RF upconverter comprises: a first plurality of upconverters for upconverting said modulated signals to IF signals; and a second upconverter for upconverting said IF signals to said RF signals.
6. An apparatus as in claim 1, wherein said plurality of modulators vestigial sideband modulate said digital data streams .
7. A data recovery apparatus for use with a high speed, digital network utilizing at least one television channel for transmission of digital data to at least one client, said receiver comprising: a tuner, said tuner tuning to a radio frequency (RF) signal residing on a standard television channel, said standard television channel containing a plurality of RF signals, each of said RF signals defining a subchannel; a first downconverter, said first downconverter downconverting said RF signal to an intermediate frequency (IF) signal; a demodulator, said demodulator demodulating said IF signal and recovering said digital data.
8. An apparatus as in claim 7, wherein said subchannel is approximately 2 MHz in bandwidth.
9. An apparatus as in claim 7, wherein a bit rate of said digital data is approximately lOMbits/sec.
10. An apparatus as in claim 7, wherein said demodulator comprises a sync detector.
11. An apparatus as in claim 7, wherein said demodulator comprises : a second downconverter, said second downconverter downconverting said IF signal to a baseband signal; and a baseband sampler, said baseband sampler recovering said digital data from said baseband signal.
12. In a network utilizing at least a portion of a television spectrum to communicate high speed digital data to at least one client, the improvement comprising: a medium, said medium transporting television spectrum signals to said at least one client; a plurality of modulators, said modulators each modulating a respective portion of said digital data into a plurality of modulated signals; a radio frequency (RF) upconverter, said RF upconverter upconverting said modulated signals to RF signals residing on a standard television channel on said medium, each of said RF signals defining a subchannel; a tuner, said tuner tuning to one of said RF signals on said medium; a first downconverter, said first downconverter downconverting said one of said RF signals to an IF signal; and a demodulator, said demodulator demodulating said IF signal and approximately recovering a respective portion of said digital data.
13. An improvement as in claim 12, wherein said subchannel is approximately 2 MHz in bandwidth.
14. An improvement as in claim 12, wherein a bit rate of each of said respective portions of said digital data is approximately lOMbits/sec.
15. An improvement as in claim 12, wherein said plurality of modulators quadrature amplitude modulate said digital data.
16. An improvement as in claim 15, wherein said RF upconverter comprises: a first plurality of upconverters for upconverting said modulated signals to IF signals; and a second upconverter for upconverting said IF signals to said RF signals.
17. An improvement as in claim 12, wherein said plurality of modulators vestigial sideband modulate said digital data.
18. An improvement as in claim 17, wherein said demodulator comprises a sync detector.
19. An improvement as in claim 16, wherein said demodulator comprises: a second downconverter, said second downconverter downconverting said IF signal to a baseband signal; and a baseband sampler, said baseband sampler recovering said digital data from said baseband signal.
20. An improvement as in claim 12, further comprising: a client modulator, said client modulator modulating client data, said client data having a lower bit rate than said respective portion of said digital data; a client RF upconverter, said client RF upconverter upconverting said modulated client data to a client RF signal residing on a portion of a standard television channel, said client RF signal defining a subchannel; an upstream tuner, said upstream tuner tuning to said client RF signal; an upstream downconverter, said upstream downconverter downconverting said client RF signal to a client IF signal; and an upstream demodulator, said upstream demodulator demodulating said client IF signal and approximately recovering a said client data.
21. An improvement as in claim 20, wherein said a client RF upconverter places said client RF signal upon said medium and said upstream tuner tunes to said client RF signal upon said medium.
22. In a hybrid access system utilizing at least a portion of a television spectrum to communicate high speed digital data to at least one client, the improvement comprising : a medium, said medium transporting television spectrum signals to said at least one client; a plurality of modulators, said modulators each modulating a respective portion of said digital data into a plurality of modulated signals; a radio frequency (RF) upconverter, said RF upconverter upconverting said modulated signals to RF signals residing on a standard television channel on said medium, each of said RF signals defining a subchannel; a tuner, said tuner tuning to one of said RF signals on said medium; a first downconverter, said first downconverter downconverting said one of said RF signals to an IF signal; and a demodulator, said demodulator demodulating said IF signal and approximately recovering a respective portion of said digital data.
23. An improvement as in claim 22, wherein said subchannel is approximately 2 MHz m bandwidth.
24. An improvement as m claim 22, wherein a bit rate of each of said respective portions of said digital data is approximately lOMbits/sec.
25. An improvement as in claim 22, wherein said plurality of modulators quadrature amplitude modulate said digital data.
26. An improvement as in claim 25, wherein said RF upconverter comprises: a first plurality of upconverters for upconverting said modulated signals to IF signals; and a second upconverter for upconverting said IF signals to said RF signals.
27. An improvement as in claim 22, wherein said plurality of modulators vestigial sideband modulate said digital data.
28. An improvement as m claim 27, wherein said demodulator comprises a sync detector.
29. An improvement as in claim 26, wherein said demodulator comprises: a second downconverter, said second downconverter downconverting said IF signal to a baseband signal; and a baseband sampler, said baseband sampler recovering said digital data from said baseband signal.
30. An improvement as in claim 22, further comprising: a client modulator, said client modulator modulating client data, said client data having a lower bit rate than said respective portion of said digital data; a client RF upconverter, said client RF upconverter upconverting said modulated client data to a client RF signal residing on a portion of a standard television channel, said client RF signal defining a subchannel; an upstream tuner, said upstream tuner tuning to said client RF signal; an upstream downconverter, said upstream downconverter downconverting said client RF signal to a client IF signal; and an upstream demodulator, said upstream demodulator demodulating said client IF signal and approximately recovering a said client data.
31. An improvement as in claim 30, wherein said a client RF upconverter places said client RF signal upon said medium and said upstream tuner tunes to said client RF signal upon said medium.
32. In a high speed, asymmetric, full-duplex communication system utilizing at least a portion of a television spectrum to communicate high speed digital data in a downstream direction to at least one client, the improvement comprising: a medium, said medium transporting television spectrum signals to said at least one client; a plurality of modulators, said modulators each modulating a respective portion of said digital data into a plurality of modulated signals; a radio frequency (RF) upconverter, said RF upconverter upconverting said modulated signals to RF signals residing on a standard television channel on said medium, each of said RF signals defining a subchannel; a client tuner, said client tuner tuning to one of said RF signals on said medium; a first client downconverter, said first client downconverter downconverting said one of said RF signals to an IF signal; and a client demodulator, said client demodulator demodulating said IF signal and approximately recovering a respective portion of said digital data.
33 . An improvement as in claim 32, wherein said subchannel is approximately 2 MHz in bandwidth.
34. An improvement as in claim 32, wherein a bit rate of each of said respective portions of said digital data is approximately lOMbits/sec.
35. An improvement as in claim 32, wherein said plurality of modulators quadrature amplitude modulate said digital data.
36. An improvement as in claim 35, wherein said RF upconverter comprises: a first plurality of upconverters for upconverting said modulated signals to IF signals; and a second upconverter for upconverting said IF signals to said RF signals.
37. An improvement as in claim 32, wherein said plurality of modulators vestigial sideband modulate said digital data.
38. An improvement as in claim 37, wherein said client demodulator comprises a sync detector.
39. An improvement as in claim 36, wherein said client demodulator comprises: a second downconverter, said second downconverter downconverting said IF signal to a baseband signal; and a baseband sampler, said baseband sampler recovering said digital data from said baseband signal.
40. An improvement as in claim 32, further comprising: a client modulator, said client modulator modulating client data for transmission in an upstream direction, said client data having a lower bit rate than said respective portion of said digital data; a client RF upconverter, said client RF upconverter upconverting said modulated client data to a client RF signal residing on a portion of a standard television channel, said client RF signal defining a subchannel; an upstream tuner, said upstream tuner tuning to said client RF signal; an upstream downconverter, said upstream downconverter downconverting said client RF signal to a client IF signal; and an upstream demodulator, said upstream demodulator demodulating said client IF signal and approximately recovering a said client data.
41. An improvement as in claim 40, wherein said a client RF upconverter places said client RF signal upon said medium and said upstream tuner tunes to said client RF signal upon said medium.
42. A method for improving overall performance of a high speed, asymmetric, digital information transmission system utilizing at least a portion of a television spectrum comprising: dividing at least one television channel into a plurality of subchannels; modulating digital data; transmitting said modulated data over at least one of said subchannels.
43. A method as in claim 42, wherein said plurality of subchannels are each in a range of 2 MHz in bandwidth.
AMENDED CLAIMS
[received by the International Bureau on 28 December 1997 (28.12.97); original claims 1-43 replaced by new claims 1-45 (8 pages)]
1. In a two way network communication system for conveying digital data from at least one server to a plurality of clients, said system including a plurahty of first nodes that receive digital data signals firom said at least one server, a communication link coupled with said plurahty of first nodes, a television channel, and a plurality of second nodes each associated with a client of said plurality of clients that communicates via a standard Ethernet connection, each second node coupled to said television channel, a circuit adapted for coupling said first nodes to said second nodes via said television channel comprising: a plurahty of modulators, each modulator having a modulator input that receives a respective digital data signal from said first nodes, and a modulator output, each modulator modulating to generate a respective modulated signal on said output; and a radio frequency converter having a converter input coupled to said modulator output of one of said modulators, said converter converting to generate an RF signal corresponding to a subchannel in said television channel that carries digital data at a rate that approximates the data rate of said standard Ethernet connection.
2. A circuit as in claim 1, wherein said subchannel is approximately 2 MHz in bandwidth.
3. A circuit as in claim 1, wherein a bit rate of one of said respective digital signals is a standard Ethernet rate of approximately lOMbits/sec.
4. A circuit as in claim 1, wherein one of said plurality of modulators includes circuitry that processes said corresponding digital signal with quadrature amplitude modulation.
5. A circuit as in claim 4, wherein said radio frequency converter comprises: a first plurality of upconverters for upconverting said modulated signals to IF signals; and a second upconverter for upconverting said IF signals to said RF signals.
6. A circuit as in claim 1, wherein said one of said plurality of modulators includes circuitry that processes said corresponding digital data signal with vestigial sideband modulation.
7. In network communication system for conveying digital data from at least one server to a plurality of clients, said system having a plurahty of first nodes that receive digital data signals from said at least one server, a receiver that receives a first plurahty of digital data signals, a transmitter that transmits a first digital data signal in a television channel having a respective subchannel corresponding to each digital data signal, a communication link coupled between said plurality of first nodes and said receiver, a plurality of second nodes, a data recovery device for use in one of said second nodes for enabling the conveyance of associated digital data to at least one client, said data recovery device comprising: a tuner having a tuner input coupled with said television channel, and a tuner output, said tuner tuning to one on said subchannels to generate a second signal on said tuner output; a downconverter having a downconverter input coupled to said tuner output, and a downconverter output, said downconverter downconverting to generate a third signal on said downconverter output, said third signal having an intermediate frequency; and a demodulator having a demodulator input coupled to said downconverter output, and a demodulator output, said demodulator demodulating to enable recovery of a digital signal corresponding to said one of said subchannels for conveyance to said at least one client.
8. A device as in claim 7, wherein one of said subchannels is approximately 2 MHz in bandwidth.
9. A device as in claim 7, wherein a bit rate of one of said digital signals is a standard Ethernet rate of approximately lOMbits/sec.
10. A device as in claim 7, wherein said demodulator comprises a sync detector.
11. A device as in claim 7, wherein said demodulator comprises: a second downconverter that receives said third signal and downcoverts to generate a baseband signal; and a baseband sampler that processes said baseband signal.
12. In a network communication system including a plurality of first nodes, and a communication link coupled to said plurahty of first nodes, a system comprising: a plurahty of modulators coupled to said communication link, said modulators receiving a plurality of digital signals and generating a plurality of modulated signals each corresponding to a respective one of said digital signals; a radio frequency upconverter, said upconverter upconverting one of said modulated signals to an RF signal residing in a standard television channel of said shared medium, said RF signal corresponding to one of a plurality of subchannels of said television channel; a shared medium coupled to said upconverter; a plurality of second nodes coupled to said shared medium; a plurahty of devices, each device corresponding to a respective one said plurality of second nodes, each device including a tuner having a tuner input coupled to said television channel, and a tuner output, said tuner tuning to one of said subchannels to generate a second signal on said tuner output; a downconverter having a downconverter input, coupled to said tuner output, and a downconverter output, said downconverter downconverting to generate a third signal on said downconverter output, said third signal having an intermediate frequency, a demodulator that receives said third signal and demodulates to enable recovery of said digital signal corresponding to said one of said subchannels.
13. The system as in claim 12, wherein one of said subchannels is approximately 2 MHz in bandwidth.
14. (Amended) The system as in claim 12, wherein a bit rate of each of said digital signals is a standard Ethernet rate of approximately lOMbits/sec.
15. The system as in claim 12, wherein one of said plurahty of modulators includes circuitry that processes said corresponding digital signal with quadrature amplitude modulation.
16. The system as in claim 15, wherein said upconverter comprises: a first plurahty of upconverters for upconverting said modulated signals to IF signals; and a second upconverter for upconverting said IF signals to said RF signals.
17. The system as in claim 2, wherein said one of said plurality of modulators includes circuitry that processes said corresponding digital signal with vestigial sideband modulation.
18. The system as in claim 17, wherein said demodulator comprises a sync detector.
19. The system as in claim 16, wherein said demodulator comprises: a second downconverter that receives said third signal and downcoverts to generate a baseband signal; and a baseband sampler that processes said baseband signal.
20 The system as in claim 12, further comprising: a client modulator, said client modulator modulating client data, said client data having a lower bit rate than said respective portion of said digital data; a client RF upconverter, said client RF upconverter upconverting said modulated client data to a client RF signal residing on a portion of a standard television channel, said client RF signal corresponding to a subchannel; an upstream tuner, said upstream tuner tuning to said client RF signal; an upstream downconverter, said upstream downconverter downconverting said client RF signal to a client IF signal; and an upstream demodulator, said upstream demodulator demodulating said client IF signal and approximately recovering a said client data.
21. The system as in claim 20, wherein said a client RF upconverter places said client RF signal upon said medium and said upstream tuner tunes to said client F signal upon said medium.
22. In an asymmetric network communication system including a plurality of first nodes, a communication link coupled to said plurality of first nodes, and a plurahty of second channels for sending a second plurality of digital signals from said second nodes to said first nodes, a system comprising: a plurahty of modulators, coupled to said communication link, said modulators receiving a plurality of digital signals and generating a plurality of modulated signals each corresponding to a respective one of said digital signals; a radio frequency upconverter, said upconverter upconverting one of said modulated signals to an RF signal residing in a standard television channel of said shared medium, said RF signal corresponding to one of a plurality of subchannels of said television channel; a shared medium coupled to said upconverter; a plurahty of second nodes coupled to said shared medium; a plurality of devices, each device corresponding to a respective one said plurahty of second nodes, each device including a tuner having a tuner input coupled to said television channel, and a tuner output, said tuner tuning to one of said subchannels to generate a second signal on said tuner output; a downconverter having a downconverter input, coupled to said tuner output, and a downconverter output, said downconverter downconverting to generate a third signal on said downconverter output, said third signal having an intermediate frequency, and a demodulator that receives said third signal and demodulates to enable recovery of said digital signal corresponding to said one of said subchannels.
23. The system as in claim 22, wherein one of said subchannels is approximately 2 MHz in bandwidth.
24. The system as in claim 22, wherein a bit rate of each of said digital signals is a standard Ethernet rate of approximately lOMbits/sec.
25. The system as in claim 22, wherein one of said plurahty of modulators includes circuitry that processes said corresponding digital signal with quadrature amplitude modulation.
26. The system as in claim 25, wherein said upconverter comprises: a first plurality of upconverters for upconverting said modulated signals to IF signals; and a second upconverter for upconverting said IF signals to said RF signals.
27. The system as in claim 22,wherein said one of said plurality of modulators includes circuitry that processes said corresponding digital signal with vestigial sideband modulation.
28. The system as in claim 27, wherein said demodulator comprises a sync detector.
29. The system as in claim 26, wherein said demodulator comprises: a second downconverter that receives said third signal and downcoverts to generate, a baseband signal; and a baseband sampler that processes said baseband signal.
30. The system as in claim 22, further comprising: a client modulator, said chent modulator modulating chent data, said client data having a lower bit rate than said respective portion of said digital data; a chent RF upconverter, said client RF upconverter upconverting said modulated client data to a client RF signal residing on a portion of a standard television channel, said client RF signal corresponding to a subchannel; an upstream tuner, said upstream tuner tuning to said client RF signal; an upstream downconverter, said upstream downconverter downconverting said chent RF signal to a client IF signal; and an upstream demodulator, said upstream demodulator demodulating said chent IF signal and approximately recovering a said client data.
31. The system as in claim 30, wherein said a client RF upconverter places said chent RF signal upon said medium and said upstream tuner tunes to said client RF signal upon said medium.
32. In a high speed asymmetric two way communication system utilizing at least a portion of a television spectrum to convey high speed digital data in a downstream direction to at least one chent, the improvement comprising: a shared medium for transporting signals contained in the spectrum of a television channel to said at least one client; a plurality of modulators, said modulators each modulating a signal contained in a respective portion of said television channel into a plurality of modulated signals; a radio frequency upconverter associated with a modulator, said upconverter upconverting an associated modulated signal to an RF signal residing in a standard television channel of said shared medium, said RF signal defining a subchannel within said television channel; a client tuner, said client tuner tuning to one of said RF signals on said shared medium; a first client downconverter associated with said tuner, said first chent downconverter downconverting said one of said RF signals to an IF signal; and a chent demodulator, said client demodulator demodulating said IF signal to enable recovery of digital data for conveyance to a chent.
33. The improvement as in claim 32, wherein said subchannel is approximately 2 MHz in bandwidth.
34. The improvement as in claim 32, wherein a bit rate of each of said respective subchannels is a standard Ethernet rate of approximately lOMbits/sec.
35. The improvement as in claim 32, wherein said plurality of modulators quadrature amplitude modulate said digital data.
36. The improvement as in claim 35, wherein said RF upconverter comprises: a first plurahty of upconverters for upconverting said modulated signals to EF signals; and a second upconverter for upconverting said IF signals to said RF signals.
37. The improvement as in claim 32, wherein said plurality of modulators vestigial sideband modulate said digital data.
38. The improvement as in claim 37, wherein said client demodulator comprises a sync detector.
39. The improvement as in claim 36, wherein said chent demodulator comprises: a second downconverter, said second downconverter downconverting said IF signal to a baseband signal; and a baseband sampler, said baseband sampler recovering said digital data from said baseband signal.
40. The improvement as in claim 32, further comprising: a client modulator, said client modulator modulating chent data for transmission in an upstream direction, said chent data having a lower bit rate than said respective portion of said digital data; a chent RF upconverter, said client RF upconverter upconverting said modulated client data to a chent RF signal residing on a portion of a standard television channel, said chent RF signal defining a subchannel; an upstream tuner, said upstream tuner tuning to said chent RF signal; an upstream downconverter, said upstream downconverter downconverting said chent RF signal to a client IF signal; and an upstream demodulator, said upstream demodulator demodulating said chent ΣF signal and approximately recovering a said client data.
41. The improvement as in claim 40, wherein said a client RF upconverter places said chent RF signal upon said medium and said upstream tuner tunes to said client RF signal upon said medium.
42. In a network communication system having a plurality of first nodes, a communication link coupled to said plurahty of first nodes, a television channel, a plurality of second nodes, each second node coupled to said television channel, a method comprising: dividing said television channel into a plurahty of subchannels; modulating respective subchannel signals with respective digital data; transmitting modulated subchannel signals over at least one of said subchannels to said plurahty of second nodes; and detecting, at said second nodes, digital data in transmitted modulated subchannel signals.
43. The method as in claim 42, wherein said dividing includes dividing to produce a plurahty of subchannels each in a range of 2 MHz in bandwidth.
44. A network communication system comprising: a plurahty of first nodes; a circuit including a receiver that receives a first plurahty of digital signals, a transmitter that transmits a first signal on a television channel having subchannels each corresponding to a respective one of the first plurality of digital signals; a communication link, coupled between the plurality of first nodes and the circuit; a plurality of second nodes, each including a tuner having a tuner input coupled to the television channel, and a tuner output, the tuner tuning to one on the subchannels to generate a second signal on the tuner output, a downconverter having a downconverter input, coupled, to the tuner output, and a downconverter output, the downconverter downconverting to generate a third signal on the downconverter output, the third signal having an intermediate frequency, and a demodulator having a demodulator input, coupled to the downconverter output, and at demodulator output, the demodulator demodulating to enable recovery of the digital signal corresponding to the one of the subchannels; and a plurality of second channels for sending a second plurality of digital signals from the second nodes to the first nodes.
45. In a network communication system including a plurality of first nodes, and a plurality of second nodes, a method comprising the steps, performed at a location between the plurality of first nodes and the plurality of second nodes, of: receiving a first plurality of digital signals; and transmitting a first signal on a television channel having subchannels each corresponding to a respective one of the first plurality of digital signals, and the steps, performed in each second node, of: timing to one on the subchannels to generate a second signal; downconverting the second signal to generate a third signal; and demodulating to enable recovery of the digital signal corresponding to the one of the subchannels. Statement Under Article 19
The claims are amended in light of the disclosure of Mojoli et al. to more specifically direct the claimed invention (see claim 1 for example) to a two way network communication system utilizing a television channel to convey data to a client device wherein the 6 Mhz or 8 Mhz bandwidth of the TV channel is subchannelized into 2 Mhz subchannels in order to carry data at a standard 10 Mbps Ethernet rate thereby to match in each subchannel the data reception rate of a PC connected via a conventional LAN. Mojoli et al., on the other hand, pertains to subchaπnelization generally and does not teach or suggest unique the requirement of matching server data rates conveyed over a television channel with PC data rates conveyed over a LAN in a two way network session.
PCT/US1997/014990 1996-08-26 1997-08-26 Subchannelization scheme for use in a broadband communication system WO1998009438A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU40899/97A AU4089997A (en) 1996-08-26 1997-08-26 Subchannelization scheme for use in a broadband communication system

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US08/702,932 1996-08-26
US08/702,932 US5959660A (en) 1996-08-26 1996-08-26 Subchannelization scheme for use in a broadband communications system

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1998009438A1 true WO1998009438A1 (en) 1998-03-05

Family

ID=24823211

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1997/014990 WO1998009438A1 (en) 1996-08-26 1997-08-26 Subchannelization scheme for use in a broadband communication system

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (1) US5959660A (en)
AU (1) AU4089997A (en)
WO (1) WO1998009438A1 (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2001003440A1 (en) * 1999-07-06 2001-01-11 General Instrument Corporation Method and apparatus for generating multiple independent qam channels
WO2001047261A1 (en) * 1999-12-20 2001-06-28 General Instrument Corporation Multiple channel upconverter having adjacent channel output and method of implementing the same
EP1451948A1 (en) * 2001-11-01 2004-09-01 Broadlogic Network Technologies Multi-channel broadband content distribution system
EP1829367A2 (en) * 2004-12-15 2007-09-05 Time Warner Cable, Inc. Method and apparatus for wideband distribution of content
US10200731B2 (en) 2010-09-03 2019-02-05 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Digital domain content processing and distribution apparatus and methods
US10411939B2 (en) 2010-05-27 2019-09-10 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Digital domain content processing and distribution apparatus and methods
US10432990B2 (en) 2001-09-20 2019-10-01 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Apparatus and methods for carrier allocation in a communications network

Families Citing this family (55)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6334219B1 (en) 1994-09-26 2001-12-25 Adc Telecommunications Inc. Channel selection for a hybrid fiber coax network
US7280564B1 (en) 1995-02-06 2007-10-09 Adc Telecommunications, Inc. Synchronization techniques in multipoint-to-point communication using orthgonal frequency division multiplexing
USRE42236E1 (en) 1995-02-06 2011-03-22 Adc Telecommunications, Inc. Multiuse subcarriers in multipoint-to-point communication using orthogonal frequency division multiplexing
DE19535327C1 (en) * 1995-09-22 1996-05-15 Bosch Gmbh Robert Process for the joint transmission of digitally and analog modulated radio and / or television broadcast signals
US6493335B1 (en) * 1996-09-24 2002-12-10 At&T Corp. Method and system for providing low-cost high-speed data services
US6101180A (en) * 1996-11-12 2000-08-08 Starguide Digital Networks, Inc. High bandwidth broadcast system having localized multicast access to broadcast content
US6775840B1 (en) 1997-12-19 2004-08-10 Cisco Technology, Inc. Method and apparatus for using a spectrum analyzer for locating ingress noise gaps
US6433835B1 (en) 1998-04-17 2002-08-13 Encamera Sciences Corporation Expanded information capacity for existing communication transmission systems
US6574797B1 (en) 1999-01-08 2003-06-03 Cisco Technology, Inc. Method and apparatus for locating a cleaner bandwidth in a frequency channel for data transmission
US6570913B1 (en) 1999-04-05 2003-05-27 Cisco Technology, Inc. Method and apparatus for selecting optimum frequency for upstream data transmission in a network system utilizing cable modems
US6751191B1 (en) 1999-06-29 2004-06-15 Cisco Technology, Inc. Load sharing and redundancy scheme
US7065779B1 (en) * 1999-10-13 2006-06-20 Cisco Technology, Inc. Technique for synchronizing multiple access controllers at the head end of an access network
US6839829B1 (en) 2000-01-18 2005-01-04 Cisco Technology, Inc. Routing protocol based redundancy design for shared-access networks
US7058007B1 (en) 2000-01-18 2006-06-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Method for a cable modem to rapidly switch to a backup CMTS
US6742044B1 (en) 2000-05-10 2004-05-25 Cisco Technology, Inc. Distributed network traffic load balancing technique implemented without gateway router
US6789125B1 (en) 2000-05-10 2004-09-07 Cisco Technology, Inc. Distributed network traffic load balancing technique implemented without gateway router
US7395348B1 (en) * 2000-06-05 2008-07-01 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network cache-based content routing
US6981056B1 (en) 2000-06-28 2005-12-27 Cisco Technology, Inc. Wide area load balancing of web traffic
US7072979B1 (en) 2000-06-28 2006-07-04 Cisco Technology, Inc. Wide area load balancing of web traffic
US7062571B1 (en) 2000-06-30 2006-06-13 Cisco Technology, Inc. Efficient IP load-balancing traffic distribution using ternary CAMs
US7069324B1 (en) 2000-06-30 2006-06-27 Cisco Technology, Inc. Methods and apparatus slow-starting a web cache system
US20020028680A1 (en) * 2000-07-07 2002-03-07 Open Pit Networks, Inc System, method and computer program product for wireless data transmission over conventional television frequency bands
US7287072B1 (en) 2000-10-17 2007-10-23 Sprint Communications Company L.P. Remote monitoring information management
US7113494B1 (en) 2000-10-17 2006-09-26 Sprint Communications Company L.P. Broadband wireless communications using multiple contention channels
US7002937B1 (en) 2000-10-17 2006-02-21 Sprint Communications Company L.P. Access based on termination in a wireless communication system
US7843963B1 (en) 2000-10-17 2010-11-30 Sprint Communications Company L.P. Probe device for determining channel information in a broadband wireless system
US7266080B1 (en) 2000-10-17 2007-09-04 Sprint Communications Company L.P. Access based on a rate in a wireless communication system
US20020073431A1 (en) * 2000-12-11 2002-06-13 Adc Telecommunications, Inc. Supporting multiple data channels in a cable modem termination system
US6795858B1 (en) 2000-12-29 2004-09-21 Cisco Technology, Inc. Method and apparatus for metric based server selection
US7062562B1 (en) 2001-04-11 2006-06-13 Cisco Technology, Inc. Methods and apparatus for content server selection
US7080138B1 (en) 2001-04-11 2006-07-18 Cisco Technology, Inc. Methods and apparatus for content server selection
US6718553B2 (en) * 2001-06-06 2004-04-06 Complete Tv Llc Centralized aggregation of broadcast television programming and multi-market digital delivery thereof over interconnected terrestrial fiber optic networks
US7881208B1 (en) 2001-06-18 2011-02-01 Cisco Technology, Inc. Gateway load balancing protocol
US7085287B1 (en) 2001-06-27 2006-08-01 Cisco Technology, Inc. Map routing technique implemented in access networks
US7349430B1 (en) 2001-06-27 2008-03-25 Cisco Technology, Inc. Addressing scheme implemented in access networks
US7227863B1 (en) 2001-11-09 2007-06-05 Cisco Technology, Inc. Methods and apparatus for implementing home agent redundancy
US20030112883A1 (en) * 2001-12-13 2003-06-19 Ihrie David Wayne Method and apparatus for bi-directional communication in systems broadcasting multi-carrier signals
US7227838B1 (en) 2001-12-14 2007-06-05 Cisco Technology, Inc. Enhanced internal router redundancy
US7180942B2 (en) * 2001-12-18 2007-02-20 Dotcast, Inc. Joint adaptive optimization of soft decision device and feedback equalizer
US8635305B1 (en) 2001-12-19 2014-01-21 Cisco Technology, Inc. Mechanisms for providing differentiated services within a web cache
US7720997B1 (en) 2001-12-19 2010-05-18 Cisco Technology, Inc. Path selection system
US7580482B2 (en) 2003-02-19 2009-08-25 Endres Thomas J Joint, adaptive control of equalization, synchronization, and gain in a digital communications receiver
US7814232B2 (en) 2003-03-28 2010-10-12 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network address translation with gateway load distribution
US7593346B2 (en) * 2003-07-31 2009-09-22 Cisco Technology, Inc. Distributing and balancing traffic flow in a virtual gateway
US7864678B1 (en) 2003-08-12 2011-01-04 Marvell International Ltd. Rate adaptation in wireless systems
US7697449B1 (en) * 2004-07-20 2010-04-13 Marvell International Ltd. Adaptively determining a data rate of packetized information transmission over a wireless channel
US7840988B1 (en) 2004-05-07 2010-11-23 Cisco Technology, Inc. Front-end structure for access network line card
US8180883B1 (en) 2004-08-02 2012-05-15 Cisco Technology, Inc. Method and system for processing directives included in management events
US8059661B2 (en) * 2004-12-29 2011-11-15 Cisco Technology, Inc. Methods and apparatus for using DHCP for home address management of nodes attached to an edge device and for performing mobility and address management as a proxy home agent
US7756497B2 (en) * 2006-03-30 2010-07-13 Radiosophy, Llc Method and apparatus for switching between subchannels on a single radio frequency broadcast
US7686216B2 (en) * 2006-06-13 2010-03-30 Hand Held Products, Inc. Method and apparatus for uniquely associating a bar code reading terminal to a cash register in a retail store network
US8667175B2 (en) * 2008-03-13 2014-03-04 Cisco Technology, Inc. Server selection for routing content to a client using application layer redirection
KR101674209B1 (en) * 2010-01-27 2016-11-08 삼성전자주식회사 Apparatus and method for transmitting and receiving ethernet data between digital unit and rf unit
US10917163B2 (en) 2014-08-15 2021-02-09 SEAKR Engineering, Inc. Integrated mixed-signal RF transceiver with ADC, DAC, and DSP and high-bandwidth coherent recombination
WO2016025953A1 (en) 2014-08-15 2016-02-18 SEAKR Engineering, Inc. Integrated mixed-signal asic with adc, dac, and dsp

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4615040A (en) * 1984-06-14 1986-09-30 Coenco Ltd. High speed data communications system
US5602847A (en) * 1995-09-27 1997-02-11 Lucent Technologies Inc. Segregated spectrum RF downconverter for digitization systems

Family Cites Families (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
AU576787B2 (en) * 1983-11-07 1988-09-08 Sony Corporation Satellite to cable television interface
US4893316A (en) * 1985-04-04 1990-01-09 Motorola, Inc. Digital radio frequency receiver
US4937821A (en) * 1987-01-27 1990-06-26 Readtronics Pipeline information delivery system
US5351234A (en) * 1990-12-28 1994-09-27 Nynex Corporation System for integrated distribution of switched voice and television on coaxial cable
US5243629A (en) * 1991-09-03 1993-09-07 At&T Bell Laboratories Multi-subcarrier modulation for hdtv transmission
EP0639030B1 (en) * 1993-08-13 2000-07-12 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Two-way CATV system
US5594726A (en) * 1993-09-17 1997-01-14 Scientific-Atlanta, Inc. Frequency agile broadband communications system
US5477199A (en) * 1994-04-05 1995-12-19 Scientific-Atlanta, Inc. Digital quadrature amplitude and vestigial sideband modulation decoding method and apparatus
US5629736A (en) * 1994-11-01 1997-05-13 Lucent Technologies Inc. Coded domain picture composition for multimedia communications systems
US5586121A (en) * 1995-04-21 1996-12-17 Hybrid Networks, Inc. Asymmetric hybrid access system and method

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4615040A (en) * 1984-06-14 1986-09-30 Coenco Ltd. High speed data communications system
US5602847A (en) * 1995-09-27 1997-02-11 Lucent Technologies Inc. Segregated spectrum RF downconverter for digitization systems

Cited By (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2001003440A1 (en) * 1999-07-06 2001-01-11 General Instrument Corporation Method and apparatus for generating multiple independent qam channels
WO2001047261A1 (en) * 1999-12-20 2001-06-28 General Instrument Corporation Multiple channel upconverter having adjacent channel output and method of implementing the same
US6473593B1 (en) 1999-12-20 2002-10-29 General Instruments Corporation Multiple channel upconverter having adjacent channel output and method of implementing the same
US11303944B2 (en) 2001-09-20 2022-04-12 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Apparatus and methods for carrier allocation in a communications network
US10432990B2 (en) 2001-09-20 2019-10-01 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Apparatus and methods for carrier allocation in a communications network
EP1451948A1 (en) * 2001-11-01 2004-09-01 Broadlogic Network Technologies Multi-channel broadband content distribution system
EP1451948A4 (en) * 2001-11-01 2010-05-05 Broadlogic Network Tech Inc Multi-channel broadband content distribution system
US9723267B2 (en) 2004-12-15 2017-08-01 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Method and apparatus for wideband distribution of content
EP2658249A3 (en) * 2004-12-15 2014-08-13 Time Warner Cable Inc. Method and apparatus for wideband distribution of content
EP1829367A4 (en) * 2004-12-15 2010-09-01 Time Warner Cable Inc Method and apparatus for wideband distribution of content
EP1829367A2 (en) * 2004-12-15 2007-09-05 Time Warner Cable, Inc. Method and apparatus for wideband distribution of content
US11509866B2 (en) 2004-12-15 2022-11-22 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Method and apparatus for multi-band distribution of digital content
US10411939B2 (en) 2010-05-27 2019-09-10 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Digital domain content processing and distribution apparatus and methods
US10892932B2 (en) 2010-05-27 2021-01-12 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Digital domain content processing and distribution apparatus and methods
US10200731B2 (en) 2010-09-03 2019-02-05 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Digital domain content processing and distribution apparatus and methods
USRE47760E1 (en) 2010-09-03 2019-12-03 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Digital domain content processing and distribution apparatus and methods
US10681405B2 (en) 2010-09-03 2020-06-09 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Digital domain content processing and distribution apparatus and methods
US11153622B2 (en) 2010-09-03 2021-10-19 Time Warner Cable Enterprises Llc Digital domain content processing and distribution apparatus and methods

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU4089997A (en) 1998-03-19
US5959660A (en) 1999-09-28

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5959660A (en) Subchannelization scheme for use in a broadband communications system
US5956346A (en) Broadband communication system using TV channel roll-off spectrum
WO1998008345A9 (en) System for use in television roll-off band channels for data transfer over a network
US7298796B2 (en) Coaxial cable communications systems and methods employing single and multiple sinewave modulation and demodulation techniques
US5825829A (en) Modulator for a broadband communications system
US6091932A (en) Bidirectional point to multipoint network using multicarrier modulation
FI123210B (en) Multi-point-to-point telecommunication system
US7941822B2 (en) Intelligent device system and method for distribution of digital signals on a wideband signal distribution system
US6189037B1 (en) Broadband data interface
CA2292135C (en) Method and apparatus for filtering interference and nonlinear distortions
WO1998008345B1 (en) System for use in television roll-off band channels for data transfer over a network
US6680977B2 (en) Method and apparatus for transmitting analog and digital information signals
US6272681B1 (en) Cable modem optimized for high-speed data transmission from the home to the cable head
WO2001043353A2 (en) Wireless local loop system for accessing a wide area network
US6967966B1 (en) Digital return path for hybrid fiber/coax network
US20020083475A1 (en) Intelligent device system and method for distribution of digital signals on a wideband signal distribution system
US6496982B1 (en) Device and method relating to cable TV networks
JP3128602B2 (en) Digital transmission equipment
KR100237708B1 (en) Broadband wireless local loop
Reimers et al. The Cable Standard and Its Decoding Technique
McMullin RF and system requirements for cable modem applications
RAI et al. Digital multi–programme TV/HDTV by satellite
Narytnyk Microwave telecommunication multi-service access system using two-level modulation
Kaplan New Technique for Transmitting Two High Quality Video Signals Over a Single Terrestrial Microwave Channel
CA2618343A1 (en) Method and apparatus for filtering interference and nonlinear distortions

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AU CA IL JP KR

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AT BE CH DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE

DFPE Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101)
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: JP

Ref document number: 1998511829

Format of ref document f/p: F

122 Ep: pct application non-entry in european phase
NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: CA