back to article Aussie boffin turbo charges copper broadband

An Aussie PhD student has developed an algorithm that he says can turbo charge an ordinary copper phone line to deliver downloads at 200Mbit/s. John Papandriopoulos of the Universtity of Melbourne has patented maths he did for his thesis last year on "Dynamic Spectrum Management" (DSM). The algorithm aims to stomp crosstalk …

COMMENTS

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  1. Martin Owens
    Pirate

    Patented?

    Man you can't even patent mathematics in the USA let alone the EU; where the hell does he think he'll be able to enforce it?

    If it's only relevant to Oz then we have nothing to fear except perhaps the utter stagnation of their economy; which frankly I'm not too worried about.

  2. evilbobthebob
    Boffin

    I wonder...

    1) How much will this cost to subscribe to? I'm thinking £25/month minimum.

    2) Good on the guy for getting it working! Shame he's unlikely to get the full royalties due to copying/hacking/stealing by big corporations...

    3) I bet it won't reach the UK for another two years.

  3. Andy Worth

    200 Mbit ADSL?

    Perhaps if you live within ten metres of the exchange.......

  4. James

    Oh the irony

    ...considering how impossible Telstra et al have made it to get a decent DSL connection down under.

  5. Peter Kay

    patented - but will he see any money?

    You can bet it will be patented and protected to the hilt, as the university will want to make a shedload of cash.

    Of course a sensible student would hide any good ideas, develop them, then sell them to a large company. Or set their own company up. Sod your name on a paper, I want hard cash.

  6. Dave
    Stop

    No no no no NO!!

    Idiot!! who needs fibre indeed...I DO! Fibre can definitely give gigabit speeds now, and do it reliably. All this guy has done is give BT another reason not to start rolling out modern cables.

    but hey, what do I know, the victorian copper will probably scale to gigabit speeds (falling off to 2kbps 20 yards from the exchange!)

  7. Matthew
    Thumb Down

    latency

    Until the latency comes down too i would still rather have fibre

  8. Steven Knox
    Coat

    Shameful

    Yards? Meters!? Clearly you all need to re-read the Reg measurement standards and repost accordingly.

    And speaking of which, we need a standard for data transfer speeds. Given the nature of Reg readers (see http://www.theregister.com/2007/10/25/barmaid_fined/comments/), I propose the bfpps (Bulgarian funbag pics per second).

    Since images dimensions, quality levels, compression ratios, etc. vary significantly from source to soure, someone will have to do some serious long-term research to develop an overall average. I volunteer, provided you can convince my ISP to implement this new DSL technology in my area*.

    *Okay, I'll do it anyway...

  9. Jeff Biggs
    Boffin

    What of Cioffi?

    Wasn't it him who came up with the concept of DSM (as well as inventing the DMT line code)?

    He has a DSM project at Stanford - and a 2005 start-up http://www.assia-inc.com/ which was set up to exploit his research...

    The Reg had a story a year ago of one of the DSL vendors set to exploit DSM techniques: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/10/12/eci_faster_dsl/

    Fibre would be great, but I guess it would take forever to become a "universal service"....

  10. Michael
    Thumb Down

    I smell bullshit

    Sorry but even assuming you can mitigate the cross talk, and from what I've read that isn't a certainty, the calculations involved don't take into account the reality of our telephone network. Added to the fact that we can get better data rates with fiber today I can't see the benefit of this undoubtedly expensive kit over putting in the bloody cable network we need.

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Not much use here.

    Based on current UK trends I expect all the copper wire in the UK will have been stolen by 2012.

  12. Anonymous Coward
    Alert

    What about Shannon?

    SNR=300dB ?

    Or have I fallen victim to the infamous Pentium Bug(TM)

  13. Aubry Thonon

    Cable in Oz

    ..good idea except that:

    A) cable was only being laid by the Pay-TV companies who have since

    B) found out that it's cheaper to move everyone to satellite; and

    C) Telstra (who is still a mega-corporation owning just about all the copper lines in Oz as well as providing services over those lines) refuses to upgrade to fibre if it has to share. Isn't it nice to be a monopoly?

    In other words, unless you already have fibre in your street or are moving to a new estate meant for the extremley rich (like the recent one in Sydney), you won't get to see Fibre in your lifetime.

  14. Claudio Scola
    IT Angle

    How does this differ from DMT?

    DMT as used in ADSL and VDSL addresses this very problem in each of its 4.125kHz bands across it spectrum. So I don't quite understand what the difference it. What would be more interesting is how they've managed to increase the speed to 200Mbps and for what loop lengths?

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