February 22nd, 2009 by Brady
Previously I have discussed that cable modems share the upstream channel by using Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA). This means that when a cable modem is not transmitting data its RF transmitter is turned off. In order to transmit data it must transmit a burst of data which contains a REQUEST to the CMTS. The [...]
Tags: Cable Modem, CATV, CMTS, DOCSIS, DOCSIS 3.0, HFC, Media Access Layer, mini-slot, TDMA, Telecommunications, tick
Published by Brady on Feb 22, 2009 under
DOCSIS 101 |
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February 9th, 2009 by Brady
Through DOCSIS tutorial seminars, I have found the most effective way to bring someone up to speed on DOCSIS communications is by teaching the cable modem registration process. During the registration process, we will cover the RF physical layer, theDOCSIS Media Access Layer (MAC) and the Internet Protocol (IP) layer. Yes, the cable modem exercises the first three layers of the Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model (OSI Reference Model or OSI Model)…
Tags: Cable Modem, CATV, CMTS, DOCSIS, HFC, IP, MAC, MAP, Media Access Layer, OSI, RF, TDMA, Telecommunications, UCD
Published by Brady on Feb 9, 2009 under
DOCSIS 101 |
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February 5th, 2009 by Brady
Cable modems use RF (radio frequency) signals to transport data over hybrid-fiber coax (HFC) networks according to the DOCSIS® specification. This blog will discuss the finer points extracted from the DOCSIS specification related to how cable modems communicate with the headend Cable Modem Termination System (CMTS), allowing two-way transport of Ethernet traffic over a cable TV network.
There are currently three major revisions and one sub-revision of the DOCSIS specification; DOCSIS 1.0, 1.1, 2.0 and 3.0. With each major revision came significant changes to the cable modem upstream specification because the upstream has typically been the bottleneck in terms of data through-put rates as will be discussed.
Tags: Cable Modem, CATV, channel bonding, CMTS, data rate, DOCSIS, DOCSIS 3.0, Frequency Modulation, HFC, Hybrid Fiber Coax, QAM, Quadrature Amplitude Modulation, symbol rate, Telecommunications
Published by Brady on Feb 5, 2009 under
DOCSIS 101 |
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