Corning Introduces NexCor Optical Fiber for Triple Play Networks.Business Editors/High-Tech Writers OFC OFC Office OFC Officer OFC Of Course OFC Oxygen Free Copper OFC Oceania Football Confederation (soccer) OFC Optical Fiber Cable OFC Optical Fiber Communications OFC Optical Fiber Conference 2004 Booth # 3227 CORNING, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 24, 2004 Enables twice the launch power of other single-mode fibers, improving network coverage for fiber-to-the-x (FTTx) and cable television networks Corning Incorporated Corning Incorporated NYSE: GLW is an American manufacturer of glass, ceramics and related materials, primarily for industrial and scientific applications. The company was known until 1989 as Corning Glass Works. (NYSE NYSE See: New York Stock Exchange :GLW GLW Glasgow Airport (UK) GLW Gross Laden Weight GLW Good Lady Wife (Australia) ), a world-leading supplier of optical fiber, introduced today a new standard single-mode fiber that handles twice the launch power of other ITU-T See ITU. ITU-T - International Telecommunications Union G.652 fibers, addressing a key technical barrier facing converged voice, video and data services networks (also known as "triple play" networks). Corning(R) NexCor(TM) optical fiber with MaxPower(TM) technology reduces network costs by enabling broader network coverage and more efficient network design. NexCor fiber's advantage is designed into the optical fiber itself through Corning-engineered MaxPower technology, increasing the stimulated Brillouin scattering Brillouin scattering occurs when light in a medium (such as water or a crystal) interacts with density variations and changes its path. The density variations may be due to acoustic modes, such as phonons, or temperature gradients. (SBS See Small Business Server. ) threshold of the optical fiber by 3 dB, which doubles NexCor fiber's power-handling capability over other standard single-mode fibers. With the ability to launch twice the optical power, network operators can deploy today's cost-effective analog video The original video recording method that stores continuous waves of red, green and blue intensities. In analog video, the number of rows is fixed. There are no real columns, and the maximum detail is determined by the frequency response of the analog system. technology with broader network coverage - reducing costs per subscriber - with an outside plant that is more efficiently designed for migration to digital video transmission in the future. SBS is a non-linear effect caused by high power levels that scatter transmitted light backward ("backscattering") and degrade the signal. Analog video transmission's demanding power requirements make a fiber's SBS threshold the defining limitation of networks delivering analog video to consumers today, such as passive optical networks (PON (Passive Optical Network) An optical point-to-multipoint access network. There are no optical repeaters or other active devices in a PON, hence the name "passive. ) and cable television networks. For example, with twice the launch power enabled by NexCor fiber, a PON can double the number of subscribers served per splitter and extend its reach compared with other standard single-mode fibers. This translates directly into reduced overall costs per subscriber. "At Corning, fiber innovation has always been about tangible value creation, with customer needs driving fiber design and development," said Bob Brown, senior vice president and general manager, Corning Optical Fiber. "We worked closely with our customers and system houses to develop an optical fiber that improves network economics by addressing a specific technical limitation facing them with today's fiber technologies." NexCor fiber will be unveiled at OFC 2004 in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. with a technical demonstration of the fiber's superior power performance within the Corning Incorporated exhibit at the Los Angeles Convention Center The Los Angeles Convention Center (abbreviated LACC) is a convention center in downtown Los Angeles. The LACC hosts annual events such as the Greater Los Angeles Auto Show, and was best known to video games fans as host to E3 until its cessation in 2006. (Booth #3227, West Hall). A movie will be transmitted simultaneously over standard single-mode fiber and NexCor fiber and output onto two television screens. As the power level over both fibers increases equally, a dramatic degradation in the video quality over the standard fiber occurs, while the NexCor fiber transmission remains crisp and clear - an obvious demonstration of the product's capability and value to the service providers and consumers of triple play. NexCor fiber's power advantage also enables simple design rules, allowing network planners to design all parts of the network based on the worst-case loss scenario, which reduces the cost and complexity of network implementation. And the increased power-handling capability of NexCor fiber also offers the ability to consolidate central office or headend equipment within the network, another opportunity for cost savings. As a standard single-mode fiber, NexCor fiber is fully compatible with Corning(R) SMF-28e(R) fiber, the industry standard. Like all Corning standard single-mode fibers, NexCor fiber is ITU-T G.652.D-compliant, meeting or exceeding the most stringent and comprehensive table of specifications. ITU-T G.652.D fibers offer the most usable spectrum for robust transmission today and long-term security for the future. For more information on NexCor fiber or any of Corning's high-quality optical fibers, visit www.corning.com/opticalfiber. About Corning Incorporated Corning Incorporated (www.corning.com) is a diversified technology company that concentrates its efforts on high-impact growth opportunities. Corning combines its expertise in specialty glass, ceramic materials, polymers and the manipulation of the properties of light, with strong process and manufacturing capabilities to develop, engineer and commercialize significant innovative products for the telecommunications, flat panel display A thin display screen for computer and TV usage. The first flat panels appeared on laptop computers in the mid-1980s, and the LCD technology became the standard. Stand-alone LCD screens became available for desktop computers in the mid-1990s and exceeded sales of CRTs for the first time , environmental, semiconductor, and life sciences industries. |
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