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The Standard for Home Entertainment NetworksThe Standard for Home Entertainment Networks
Overview
The Organization
Established in January 2004 by some of the most respected, brand name, consumer broadband service providers and OEMs in the world.
Use existing coaxial cabling—installed in 90% of U.S. households
No new wires, truck rolls or interference with other technologies and mediums.
Published field tests: More than 110 Mpbs net throughput in 97% of all outlets.
Complementary to wireless—extends wireless backbone in home.
More than 50 members, and counting. Membership is OPEN.
More than 20 certified products (STBs, ONTs, gateways, home routers, ECBs)
Recently established Contributor-level membership.
Only wired home entertainment networking standard in full deployment (Verizon’s FiOS).
3
StorageStorage StorageStorage
ApplicationsApplications ApplicationsApplications
NetworkingNetworking NetworkingNetworking
StorageStorage
ApplicationsApplications
Paradigm Shift in Consumer Electronics
Explosion of contentExplosion of content
Mass market deploymentof DVR and HDTV
Mass market deploymentof DVR and HDTV
Service provider Triple-play bundling
(IPTV/TelcoTV,Cable MSOs)
Service provider Triple-play bundling
(IPTV/TelcoTV,Cable MSOs)
Analog to digital conversion
Analog to digital conversion
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The Connected Home
According to Parks Associates’ report, “Networks in the Home: Connected Consumer Electronics” (2006):
An entertainment network is a PC connected to at least one consumer electronic (CE) device, or multiple interconnected CE devices such as a whole-house DVR system.
There will be 30 million U.S. households with a connected entertainment network by 2010.
Connected entertainment will be the heart of the development and business opportunities in the digital home, and will be driven by video service providers (telco, cable and DBS) and CE and home networking manufacturers.
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Growth of Entertainment Networks
Forecast of U.S. Connected Entertainment Households
8.7
15.3
22.2
29.9
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10
15
20
25
30
35
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
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Source: Networks in the Home: Connected Consumer Electronics© 2006 Parks Associates
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Multi-room DVR STBs (U.S.)
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© 2005 Parks Associates
DVR STB Shipped Annually (#M)
Cumulative DVR STB in US Households
Oil And Water Do Not Mix
Until now, all LAN technologies were designed for data. Companies are trying to “shoehorn” them into home entertainment networking applications.
But, video behaves differently over different mediums.
And all competing wired (and some wireless) standards/technologies are also specifying coax for video.
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Square Peg, Round Hole Scenario
Membership
ContributorsContributors
PromotersPromoters
Membership
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Summary
Coax is the medium for video. Installed in 90% of U.S. households.
MoCA is the standard for home entertainment networks over coax.
Benefits appeal to service providers and consumers equally.
Independently validated net throughputs. Reality not theory.
Growing membership.
Deep and wide portfolio of certified products
In full deployment
RAND licensing environment
Roadmap to retail channel and end consumer.
Consumers will tolerate a dropped cell phone call, but they will not tolerate latency in their video.
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MoCA Is In The HOUSE!
NodeDeviceNode
Device
WANPoint Of Entry
NORMAL 2-WAY CATV
PATH
SPLITTERSPLITTERJUMPINGJUMPING
3:1 Splitter3:1 Splitter 2:1 Splitter2:1 Splitter
3:1 Splitter3:1 Splitter
SPLITTERSPLITTERJUMPINGJUMPING
NodeDeviceNode
DeviceNode
DeviceNode
DeviceNode
DeviceNode
DeviceNode
DeviceNode
DeviceNode
DeviceNode
Device