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IP the Answer for Warwick Valley Telephone

Carrier Embraces Ethernet for Triple Play Service Delivery

      

When it comes to delivering a competitive – or slightly better – triple play offering of voice, video and high-speed data services, Warwick Valley Telephone Company (WVTC) has decided you can’t beat IP.


“We’re in an IP-centric world. If the technology guys haven’t caught onto that, they really should be focusing on what products are IP and how you can leverage the product,” said Keith Scarzafava, director of network technology at WVTC.

The 104-year-old combination ILEC/CLEC is using Pannaway Technologies’ active Ethernet fiber-to-the-premise (FTTP) and ADSL2+ technologies in its CLEC territory and plans to make triple place VoIP, high-speed data and high definition TV (HDTV) available to about 20,000 additional subscribers in areas of New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, the companies said.

WVTC has two networks: a gigabit Ethernet ring with capable of running up to 10 gigabits of data and an IP ring with a central management system.

“When we decided to look at a platform to deliver our triple play services, one of the things that was attractive to me was that I could have one vendor, one platform, one place to call and not have to stitch together multiple solutions,” said Scarzafava. “I can roll out ADSL2+ -- I haven’t yet, but we are testing it; I can deliver POTS; and I can deliver fiber-to-the- home triple play services all using that same IP core that we built.”

Pannaway, he said, became the carrier’s “vendor of choice” to deliver triple play services over an FTTH network.

“The future plans are to evaluate our strategic direction here as a company and see where we go next with that platform,” he said.

One thing is certain, he said: there will be no return to the previous method of using ATM for triple play.

“When we started there was no strictly IP solution, there were deployments of a solution,” Scarzafava said of the company’s pioneering work. “IP has really leveled the playing field where you can go standards-based. You get to choose.”

Besides that, he said, the technology is just more advanced.

“Back in the day it was cumbersome; it wasn’t as tolerant and the loop links couldn’t take you as far,” he said.

IP and FTTH enabled the small player to not only meet what was being provided by incumbent cable operator Cablevision Systems and newcomer Verizon, but exceed it.

“The only way to beat them is to leapfrog what they’re doing today and then deliver products and services that are different than what they do,” he said.

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