AU699920B2 - Video-on-demand service using ATM cells - Google Patents
Video-on-demand service using ATM cells Download PDFInfo
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- AU699920B2 AU699920B2 AU30428/95A AU3042895A AU699920B2 AU 699920 B2 AU699920 B2 AU 699920B2 AU 30428/95 A AU30428/95 A AU 30428/95A AU 3042895 A AU3042895 A AU 3042895A AU 699920 B2 AU699920 B2 AU 699920B2
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Classifications
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L49/00—Packet switching elements
- H04L49/30—Peripheral units, e.g. input or output ports
- H04L49/3081—ATM peripheral units, e.g. policing, insertion or extraction
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04Q—SELECTING
- H04Q11/00—Selecting arrangements for multiplex systems
- H04Q11/04—Selecting arrangements for multiplex systems for time-division multiplexing
- H04Q11/0428—Integrated services digital network, i.e. systems for transmission of different types of digitised signals, e.g. speech, data, telecentral, television signals
- H04Q11/0478—Provisions for broadband connections
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L12/00—Data switching networks
- H04L12/54—Store-and-forward switching systems
- H04L12/56—Packet switching systems
- H04L12/5601—Transfer mode dependent, e.g. ATM
- H04L2012/5603—Access techniques
- H04L2012/5609—Topology
- H04L2012/561—Star, e.g. cross-connect, concentrator, subscriber group equipment, remote electronics
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L12/00—Data switching networks
- H04L12/54—Store-and-forward switching systems
- H04L12/56—Packet switching systems
- H04L12/5601—Transfer mode dependent, e.g. ATM
- H04L2012/5614—User Network Interface
- H04L2012/5615—Network termination, e.g. NT1, NT2, PBX
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L12/00—Data switching networks
- H04L12/54—Store-and-forward switching systems
- H04L12/56—Packet switching systems
- H04L12/5601—Transfer mode dependent, e.g. ATM
- H04L2012/5638—Services, e.g. multimedia, GOS, QOS
- H04L2012/564—Connection-oriented
Landscapes
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
- Signal Processing (AREA)
- Data Exchanges In Wide-Area Networks (AREA)
- Two-Way Televisions, Distribution Of Moving Picture Or The Like (AREA)
Description
/7 P/00/01 1 28/5/91 Regulation 3.2
AUISTRAUJA
Patentg Act 1990
ORIGINAL
COMPLETE SPECIFICATION STANDARD PATENT Invention Title: 9 9 9* 9 *4 .9 9.
9 9* a 9 *9'J4 S S 9* S. S 9*09 "VIDEO-ON-DEMAND SERVICE USING ATM CELLS" The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method of performing it known to us:- CO 2 91,46 4 11S I ~13Lr I-C 1 I System, Customer Equipment, Center, and Method for Video-on-Demand Service The present invention relates to a system particularly suited for multimedia services, including video-ondemand service, as set forth in the preamble of claim i 1, to customer equipment suited therefor as set forth in the preamble of claim 2, to a center as set forth in the preamble of claim 3, and to a method for implementing such services as set forth in the preamble of claim 4.
For such services, distribution networks with broadband downstream channels to subscribers and narrow-band return channels to the center are known.
o It is known to use such distribution networks as a common transmission medium for different services. To S.oo. be able to easily separate the services from one another, use is frequently made of frequency channels S° which are completely independent of each other. The basis is frequently a television distribution network in which some frequency channels are already occupied by freely accessible television programs. In the future, more and more television programs will only be transmitted on demand ("video-on-demand").. This necessitates data reductions, so the aim is to use exclusively digital techniques. Therefore, information iA i- -2is to be stored and transmitted using ATM technology (ATM asynchronous transfer mode), in the form of ATM cells.
It is therefore necessary to also introduce the request and other signalling data coming from the customers over their return channels into an ATM network.
According to the invention, this is accomplished according to the teaching of claims 1 to 4.
The basic idea is that the customer equipment generates its messages already in the form of ATM cells and transmits the latter transparently in a return channel allocated to it alone (at least for the signalling period).
Further advantageous features of the invention are defined in the subclaims.
The invention will become more apparent from the following description of an embodiment taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which: 0. 0: Fig. 1 shows the overall configuration of a system o according to the invention; o:o Fig. 2 shows a possible frequency allocation scheme for the system according to the invention; j Fig. 3 shows the allocation of ATM cells to synchronous channels; 4I 'I:a -3- Fig. 4 shows a part of the system according to the invention in which the center according to the invention is illustrated in greater detail; Fig. 5 shows a part of the center according to the invention with further details, and Fig. 6 is a block diagram of customer equipment according to the invention.
The system of Fig. 1 comprises an ATM exchange 10, a remote center 20, several customer premises equipments henceforth called "customer equipments" for short, two demand centers 40, a broadband telecommunication network 50, and two broadband optical network termination units In the ATM exchange 10, a switching network 11 and a few ATM interface modules 12, 13, and 14 are indicated.
eoo One of the demand centers 40 is connected by a line 41 ~.to the ATM exchange 10 at one of the ATM interface modules 12. The other of the two demand centers 40 is e oconnected to an ATM exchange (not shown) of the o:°o broadband telecommunication network 50 by a line 41.
The broadband telecommunication network 50 is connected to a further ATM interface module 12 of the ATM o exchange 10 by a trunk 51.
-The ATM exchange 10 is connected to the remote center 20 via several one-way ATM channels 15, which allow data to be transferred from the ATM exchange 10 to the remote center 20, and via a two-way'ATM channel 16.
-4- The remote center 20 is connected to each of the broadband optical network termination units 60 via a respective broadband link 61 and a respective narrowband link 63. The links continue from the network termination units 60 to the customer equipment 30 as broadband links 62 and narrow-band links 64, respectively.
By "demand center" 40 is understood a facility which can be caused by remote control to transmit selected data in the broadest sense. In particular, interactive remote control within a multimedia service is envisioned wherein the first steps of the remote control relate to the selection of a video server for Kproviding video-on-demand service, and wherein the further steps relate to the selection of a particular video film. The film selected by this remote control is subsequently transmitted to the customer by data transmission. Voice-operated remote control is also possible.
The data transmission is to be in ATM, so the request and other signalling data, the data necessary for remote control, also is to be transmitted in ATM.
Such demand centers 14 may be located at any point of the broadband telecommunication network 50. The latter need not operate in ATM throughout. In that case, interworking must be provided which permits communication with the ATM exchange The design of the ATM exchange 10, including the switching network 11 and the ATM interface modules 12, '13, and 14 contained therein, is not specific to the invention. What may possibly give rise to a sr ecial design is the fact that the interface modules 12 carry predominantly incoming traffic and the interface modules 13 exclusively outgoing traffic.
The links between the ATM exchange 10 and the remote center 20 are deliberately referred to here by the somewhat vague term "channels". What matters is not whether optical or electrical transmission takes place or whether only one line with a plurality of paths separated in wavelength or frequency or two or more optical or electric lines are used. The same applies to the "links" between the remote center 20, the network termination unit 60, and the customer equipment In the underlying project, optical fibers are to be used in the area between the ATM exchange 10 and the network termination unit 60, while coaxial cables are to be used in the customer area, between the network termination unit 60 and the customer equipment Existing broadband cable networks are to be utilized to a large extent, with television programs *8 being transmitted in the conventional manner.
Combination can take place at the remote center 20 or at the network termination units 60. For the narrow- "too.,band links 64, existing telephone subscriber lines could be used, but in the following, another possibility is described.
The customer equipment 30 can be either modem-like 4 A. interface units for television sets (also called "settop units") or PCs, or also television sets or PCs with such interface units.
I_ -6- Fig. 2 shows a possible frequency allocation plan for the information transmission between the network termination units 60 and the customer equipment 30. A channel arrangement with 8-MHz channels as is currently used for analog television is taken as a basis. Some of these channels can be and are to be used in this system for distributing television programs in analog form. A few other of these channels are to serve to transmit television signals in digital form. By use of redundancy-reducing techniques, according to the MPEG standard (MPEG Motion Picture Expert Group), and suitable modulation methods, such as 64-level quadrature amplitude modulation, QAM64, approximately five or six television signals can be transmitted in one channel. This is possible both continuously for purposes of distribution and on demand from a demand center.
p t 9 Information is to be transmitted not only downstream to the customers, but also upstream to the remote center for signalling or remote-control purposes. A few channels in the lower frequency range are assigned for this purpose. These can have a totally different o 0t arrangement. It is possible, for example, to assign to each customer a separate channel with a separate carrier for a 64-kb/s signal. In the underlying project, six channels are planned, of which four are active and two serve as spare channels. Each of the active channels contains a PCM30/32 2-Mb/s timedivision multiplex signal (to be exact: a 2048-kb/s signal). Each of this total of 120 64-kb/s timedivision multiplex channels could be permanently assigned to one customer. However, as will be explained below, particularly with reference to Fig. 3, a mode of r I 7 operation is preferred in which a channel is assigned only when needed, but hnen also two or more channels if necessary. Instead of frequency- or time-division multiplexing, code-division multiplexing is possible.
Since remote control preferably takes place in an interactive mode with the aid of menus, in the example, one of the downstream 8-MHz channels is reserved for control purposes. In this channel, an ATM data stream is transmitted exclusively for signalling purposes using QAM64.
This frequency division has the advantage of being easy to adapt to different conditions. Depending on the existing infrastructure and the organizational division of services among different operators, but also on, for example, customer density, which, in turn, influences the distances, and on the availibility of technology 4444 and equipment, upstream and downstream directions can use common or separate transmission media or further services, such as distribution services and telephony, can be incorporated or not.
oa Fig. 3 illustrates schematically how the upstream direction of the signalling operates. The first line of Fig. 3 shows an ATM data stream consisting of 0* Y successive ATM cells. Each ATM cell consists of a header, shown here as a black block, and an information crrr field, which carries a particular pattern. Cells whose information fields carry the same pattern belong to the same data stream. Cells without a pattern are empty cells. Their headers identify them as empty cells, and their information fields carry no information.
~r
A)
x 8 One of the cells is designated by an to indicate that it is a meta-signalling cell. ITU-T Recommendation Q.2120 recommends a protocol for signalling in ATM, which is used here as a basis. It was published by the ITU in February 1994 under number COM 11-R A meta-signalling channel is made available as a call channel over which individual signalling channels, socalled signalling virtual channels (SVC), are allocated.
The ATM data stream shown in the first line of Fig. 3 is, at least in the customer area, a fictitious data stream. Each of the customer equipments 30 conditions its signalling information in the form of such ATM cells. In the header, among other things, the signalling virtual channel allocated by meta-signalling is identified. To transmit information to the network termination unit 60 over the narrow-band link 64, the individual customer equipments do not successively insert their cells into the data stream, but this information is transmitted using synchronous timedivision multiplexing, as illustrated in the second line of Fig. 3.
This second line of Fig. 3 shows a single frame of a normal PCM30/32 data stream. As usual, eight bits form a time slot. Time slots 0 and 15 are not free for data transmission. Like the headers in the first line, these time slots are shown as black blocks, but they have nothing to do with those headers. Time slot 1 is reserved for the above-mentioned meta-signalling channel, and time slots 2 to 14 and 16 to 31 are reserved for signalling virtual channels. It can be seen that the different hatchings of the first line 0D Oto
I~
*0 .9 9 9.
9* 99 9 99.
0 rl-- -9- Salso occur in the different time slots of the second line. Hatchings which occur frequently in the cells of the first line also occur frequently in the time slots of the second line.
In the course of the assignment of the individual signalling channels, the SVCs, the time slots are assigned. Each SVC is assigned at least one time slot.
Within the respective assigned time slots, complete ATM cell streams with exclusively complete cells, including the headers, are transmitted. Thus, each customer I equipment 30, as long as time slots are assigned to it, continuously transmits an ATM cell stream with empty cells possibly contained therein. If two or more time slots are assigned to the same SVC, they will preferably be used one after the other. In the example °o o. shown, time slots 3, 11, 20, and 31 are hatched alike, and thus belong to the same data stream and consequently carry successive octets of this data .o stream. An essential aspect of the invention is not conveyed by this representation, namely the fact that the headers of the ATM cells are also incorporated into ,the time slots.
oro* To access the meta-signalling channels in time slot i, any suitable access method can be used. The method currently intended to be used is the ALOHA method, in which each customer equipment wishing to signal 000.
transmits a corresponding wish in an uncoordinated manner. When a customer equipment is transmitting alone, it is understood by the opposite end at the remote center and receives a reply. When cwo customer equipments are transmitting simultaneously, they interfere with one another, are not understood, and 10 receive no reply. Both will then make another attempt with random delays. In the polling method, which can also be used, the customer equipments are interrogated one after the other. If the customer equipments are arranged in a ring, the token-ring method can be used.
A token is circulated and is captured by the customer equipment wishing to seize the meta-signalling channel. The token is then passed on. If a low signalling volume is to be expected, one of these me>vds could also be used for the signalling itself, so that only one channel. would be needed for all customers together.
The frame shown in the second line of Fig. 3, too, is more or less fictitious, depending on the configuration of the lines forming the narrow-band link 64. By taking suitable synchronization measures, which are known per se, it must be ensured that at the network termination unit the signals coming from the individual customer equipments are inserted into the frame in correct time sequence.
e 4044 eo e S The overall system, with the exception of the customer S"equipment, will now be described in more detail with the aid of Fig. 4. The figure shows the ATM exchange 0, the remote center 20, one of the demand centers and one of the broadband optical network termination units 60 as well as a distribution-service center 70, a narrow-band exchange 17, and a broadband optical network termination unit of another type 65. The remote center 20 contains an ATM switching network 21, a 4444 narrow-band multiplexer 22, and several optical line termination units 23.
The distribution-service center 70 has several inputs for video signals which are converted, partly in analog form via modulators MOD, partly in digital form by I m P~ Ilx b 11 means of quadrature amplitude modulators QAM, into different frequency bands, then combined via a summer and, after being converted from electrical to optical form, distributed. The distribution services are designated here as CATV (cable TV), DVB (digital video broadcasting), and nVoD (near-video-on-demand). In the near-video-on-demand service, selected programs are transmitted several times with graduated starting times. The distribution is indicated here by splitters.
One of the outgoing optical fibers of the splitter goes to the remote center 20. The signal is first amplified in a fiber-optic amplifier FOA, then fed through a further splitter into the individual line termination units (OLT1...OLT16) 23. There it is amplified again (FOA), combined in a summer with other optical signals to be transmitted, and distributed via a wavelength-selective directional gate and a further S. splitter to the connected broadband optical network termination units 60 and 65 and from there via coaxial Lcables Coax. To this end, the signal is converted from Soptical to electrical form and electrically adapted via an interface; in the case of the network termination unit 65, it is also filtered.
Via the ATM exchange 10, connections are established from the demand center 40 (VoD Server) and the broadband telecommunication network 50 to the remote switching center 20. Apart from the video-on-demand and other multimedia services (VoD, MM) being considered i here, these are arbitrary other ATM connections. In the Sremote center 20 the ATM switching network 21 is provided, by way of example, for establishing connections between the ATM exchange and the individual Sline termination units 20. Connections which serve to unt whc serv to 12 exchange signalling information with, the demand center 40 pass through an ATM part ATM and a quadrature amplitude modulator QAM to a summer, where they are combined with the broadband signals (VoD, MM) received directly via quadrature amplitude modulators QAM. After being converted from electrical to optical form, they are combined with the distribution-service signals in the aforementioned summer and distributed together with these signals.
It With the two different network termination units 60 and different possibilities of transmitting broadband connections 61 and 62 and narrow-band connections 63 and 64 are shown. Between the remote center 20 and the network termination unit 60 or 65, the connections are transmitted in this example over separate channels, but t on common lines. In the network termination unit they are not separated, so they are transmitted to the t Cfcustomer equipment on a common line (coaxial cable). In S..the network termination unit 65, however, separation is provided such that the broadband connections, together with the distribution-service signals, are routed to the coaxial cables through the filters mentioned in connection with the distribution-service signals, while the narrow-band connections are coupled to separate lines MM through a radio-frequency network termination unit RFNT and a multimedia interface MM-Intf. Via this network termination unit RFNT and a telephone interface POTS Intf., signals for a conventional telephone POTS (POTS Plain Old Telephone Service) are coupled out.
The narrow-band exchange 17 is connected, on the one hand, to a narrow-band telecommunication network (the "normal" telephone network) and, on the other hand, to -13the narrow-band multiplexer 22 in the remote center Whether the connection is designed for analog (plain old) telephone service POTS or for digital telephone service ISDN or permits both services is left open here. The question as to which of the possible techniques is used for the transmission of POTS will not be considered here, either. The multiplexer 22 establishes the connection with a respective narrowband part NB in each of the line termination units 23.
Each narrow-band part NB is connected by a bidirectional link with a radio-frequency line termination unit RFLT. The radio-frequency line termination unit RFLT transmits on one of the channels described with reference to Fig. 2. This channel is combined with the quadrature-amplitude-modulated broadband signals and the signalling messages from the ATM part ATM in the summer mentioned above. The signal S" of the opposite direction is coupled out in the wavelength-selective directional gate and, after being I converted from optical to electrical form, fed to the radio- frequency line termination unit RFLT, from where it passes through the narrow-band part NB and the o. multiplexer 22 to the narrow-band exchange 17.
The signalling messages from a customer equipment to *0o the demand center 40 travel the same path up to the r .h radio-frequency line termination unit RFLT, from where they go through the ATM part, ATM, the switching network 21, and the ATM exchange Signalling messages betiween any of the customer equipments and the remote center 20 are handled at the latter in the ATM part ATM, Such signalling serves mainly to assign time slots. 14 14 Transmission of the broadband connections 61 and the narrow-band connections 63 on separate (optical or electric) cables is also possible in the area between remote center 20 and the broadband network termination units 60 and 65. This is advantageous if signalling messages and other narrow-band signals travelling to the customer are converted to ATM and moved onto the broadband links. Broadband and narrow-band links are then only one-way links. This results in a relatively simple technology.
Further details of the remote center 20 will now be described with reference to Fig. 5. Fig. 5 shows the ATM switching network 21 and part of one of the optical line termination units 23 with the radiofrequency line termination unit RFLT, the ATM part ATM, and the quadrature-amplitude modulator QAM succeeding the ATM part ATM.
The radio-frequency line termination unit RFLT has one receiver unit 81, comprising a channel filter and a demodulator, and one adapter 82 for each of the four channels carrying one time-division multiplex data stream each. The adapter 82 serves, inter alia, to produce synchronization.
The ATM part ATM contains a format converter unit 83, a J decryption unit 84, a buffer 85, an ATM multiplexer 86, a control unit 87 with a signalling monitoring circuit 88, a signalling processing circuit 89, a signalling circuit 90, and a time-slot assignment circuit 91, and San encryption unit 92.
The format converter unit 83 converts the four timedivision-multiplexed data streams into 120 data streams with complete ATM cells. These data streams are decrypted in the decryption unit 84 and so buffered in the buffer 85 as to be combined into a normal ATM data stream in the ATM multiplexer 86. ATM cells which, according to their headers, are not to be passed on to the ATM exchange are not inserted into the data stream by the ATM multiplexer. Free capacities are filled up with empty cells.
The control unit 87 has the function of processing the return channels formed according to the invention. This is done particularly by the signalling processing circuit 89. To this end, the latter is notified of all requests for capacity from customer equipment via the Vo signalling monitoring circuit 88, and of all capacity assignments coming from or via the ATM exchange by the signalling circuit 90. The processing circuit 89 thus manages the four times 30 available time slots.
Assignments or withdrawals of time slots are signalled, on the one hand, to the respective customer equipment via the signalling circuit 90 in the form of ATM cells and, on the other hand, to the format converter unit 83 via the time-slot assignment circuit 91.
With the aid of Fig. 6, a customer equipment will be described as far as signalling is concerned. The path of the useful information is not shown here. A multimedia device is assumed here which receives useful information from several remote stations and, therefore, has control channels to several remote stations. This device may also be an interface unit which processes the signalling information for several41 16 independent terminals. If the device is a simple terminal with only one remote station, the parallel processing paths in the lower part are not necessary.
Fig. 6 is practically the mirror image of Fig. 5; like reference characters have been used to designatcorresponding parts. Fig. 6 shows a demodulatr r." for quadrature amplitude modulation, a radio-1'- 4.4..ncy network termination unit RFNT' and an ATM part ATM'.
The input of the demodulator QAM' and the output of the network termination unit RFNT' are connected to the coaxial cable Coax.
The network termination unit RFNT' contains an adaptor 82' and a transmitter unit 81' with a modulator and a frequency converter.
The ATM part ATM' contains an interface unit 93, an ATM demultiplexer 86', a decryption unit 84', a format 4 a converter unit 83', a control unit 87' with a a signalling monitoring circuit 88', a signalling computation circuit 89', a further signalling monitoring circuit 90', and a time-slot and channel assignment circuit 91', and a decryption unit 92'.
Unlike the signalling processing circuit 89 in the remote center, the signalling computation circuit 89' does not give instructions, but only executes instructions. Therefore, it only monitors both directions without inserting signals itself. It is assumed here, however, that at the customer end only a single time-division-multiplexed data stream is available, so that the frequency converter in the transmitter unit 81' has to be tuned thereto.
Claims (10)
1. A system, particularly for multimedia services, including video-on-demand service, with a centre, a distribution network; and customer equipments connected thereto, with broadband channels from the centre to the customer equipments, and with narrow-band return channels from the customer equipments to the centre, wherein each returnchannel-capable customer equipment includes a transmitting device by means of which a data stream consisting of ATM cells is formed from the messages to be transmitted to the centre, then converted into a return channel assigned to said customer equipment, and fed into the distribution network, that the centre includes receiving devices by means of which the data streams of the respective rct return channels are recovered and temporarily stored as sequences of ATM cells, and CoI that the centre includes a multiplexer which combines the individual data streams into an overall ATM data stream. got*
2. A method, particularly for multimedia services, including video-on-demrnand service, wherein information is transmitted to customer equipments in broadband downstream channels, and wherein the customer equipments transmit messages to a te centre in narrow-band return channels, particularly for selecting the information to be Cu Stransmitted to them in a downstream channel, said method including the steps of: a c respective data stream consisting of ATM cells is formed from the messages of each customer equipment, then converted into a return channel assigned to said customer equipment, and fed into the distribution network, that at the centre, the data streams of the respective return channels are recovered and temporarily stored as sequences of ATM cells, and that the data streams of all return channels are combined into an overall ATM data stream.
3. A method as claimed in claim 2, wherein each customer equipment is assigned one return channel.
4. A method as claimed in claim 2, wherein all customer equipments are assigned a single return channel which the customer equipments use one at a time. A method as claimed in claim 2, wherein the customer equipments access the return channel by a distributed access technique, particularly the polling, ALOHA, or token-ring technique. A method as claimed in claim 2, wherein the number of return channels 18 assigned to the customer equipments is dynamically changed by the centre.
7. A method as claimed in claim 6, wherein one of the customer equipments sends to the centre, over one of the return channels assigned to it, a message in response to which the centre changes the number of return channels assigned to this customer equipment.
8. A method as claimed in claim 2, wherein the centre transmits messages to the customer equipments over additional downstream channels.
9. A method as claimed in claim 8, wherein over the additional downstream channels, the centre sends ATM cells transparently to the customer equipments.
10. A method as claimed in claim 2, wherein each of the return channels is transmitted in a separate frequency band. S cc 0o C 11. A method as claimed in claim 2, wherein two or more return channels are transmitted in one frequency band using time- or code-division multiplexing. .12. A method as claimed in claim 11, wherein the messages transmitted in a return channel are encrypted.
13. A system substantially as herein described with reference to Figures 1 4 of the i: accompanying drawing. 4 C f 14. A centre substantially as herein described with reference to Figure 5 of the oo accompanying drawings.
15. A customer equipment substantially as herein described with reference to SFigure 6 of the accompanying drawings. 1 6. A method substantially as herein described with reference to Figures 1 6 of the accompanying drawings. DATED THIS TWENTY-THIRD DAY OF OCTOBER 1998 ALCATEL N.V. Abstract System, Customer Equipment, Center, and Method for Video-on-Demand Service A system for multimedia services uses a distribution network with broadband channels as downstream channels to customers for transmitting requested information. Transmission is in ATM. Signalling information is to be transmitted in narrow-band channels, but nevertheless in ATM. Near the customers, conversion centers are installed. Between the exchange and these conversion S*centers, signalling information is transmitted in conventional ATM channels. Between the conversion center and the customers, narrow-band time-division ,o multiplex technology is used. In the narrow-band Schannels, ATM cells are used transparently up to the customers. a aJ" e i
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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DE4432282 | 1994-09-09 | ||
DE4432282A DE4432282A1 (en) | 1994-09-09 | 1994-09-09 | Video-on-demand system using return channels in ATM network |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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AU3042895A AU3042895A (en) | 1996-03-21 |
AU699920B2 true AU699920B2 (en) | 1998-12-17 |
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AU30428/95A Ceased AU699920B2 (en) | 1994-09-09 | 1995-09-04 | Video-on-demand service using ATM cells |
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AU (1) | AU699920B2 (en) |
DE (1) | DE4432282A1 (en) |
NZ (1) | NZ272808A (en) |
Families Citing this family (2)
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WO1997009827A1 (en) * | 1995-09-07 | 1997-03-13 | Nec Australia Pty. Ltd. | A distribution system |
DE19647764A1 (en) * | 1996-11-19 | 1998-05-20 | Bosch Gmbh Robert | Method for bidirectional data transmission |
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EP0355697A2 (en) * | 1988-08-19 | 1990-02-28 | Hitachi, Ltd. | Multimedia bidirectional broadcast system |
DE4142550A1 (en) * | 1991-12-21 | 1993-06-24 | Philips Patentverwaltung | Video conference system with central coupling bay - has central studio controlling coupling bay for transmission and reception of multiplex signals contg. video and audio information |
US5247347A (en) * | 1991-09-27 | 1993-09-21 | Bell Atlantic Network Services, Inc. | Pstn architecture for video-on-demand services |
Family Cites Families (2)
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DE3418618A1 (en) * | 1984-02-16 | 1985-08-22 | Siemens AG, 1000 Berlin und 8000 München | Information retrieval system |
DE4142812A1 (en) * | 1991-12-23 | 1993-06-24 | Heyo Dr Ing Habil Mennenga | Text information transmission procedure via HF bandwidth channels - using standard TV or radio channel when not being utilised for transmission of programme information |
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1994
- 1994-09-09 DE DE4432282A patent/DE4432282A1/en not_active Withdrawn
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1995
- 1995-08-18 NZ NZ272808A patent/NZ272808A/en unknown
- 1995-09-04 AU AU30428/95A patent/AU699920B2/en not_active Ceased
Patent Citations (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
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EP0355697A2 (en) * | 1988-08-19 | 1990-02-28 | Hitachi, Ltd. | Multimedia bidirectional broadcast system |
US5247347A (en) * | 1991-09-27 | 1993-09-21 | Bell Atlantic Network Services, Inc. | Pstn architecture for video-on-demand services |
DE4142550A1 (en) * | 1991-12-21 | 1993-06-24 | Philips Patentverwaltung | Video conference system with central coupling bay - has central studio controlling coupling bay for transmission and reception of multiplex signals contg. video and audio information |
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Publication number | Publication date |
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AU3042895A (en) | 1996-03-21 |
NZ272808A (en) | 1997-02-24 |
DE4432282A1 (en) | 1996-03-14 |
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