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RE: [10GBASE-T] : Economic feasibility




In my understanding (and my dictionary's) of the word, "unanimous" means there were no no votes but not necessarily that there were no abstentions.

Pat

-----Original Message-----
From: Cobb, Terry R (Terry) [mailto:tcobb@avaya.com]
Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2003 1:51 PM
To: stds-802-3-10gbt@ieee.org
Subject: RE: [10GBASE-T] : Economic feasibility



I don't remember anything that was unanimous, meaning everybody voted in favor and there were no abstentions or no votes.

Terry

-----Original Message-----
From: Booth, Bradley [mailto:bradley.booth@intel.com]
Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2003 2:04 PM
To: stds-802-3-10gbt@ieee.org
Subject: RE: [10GBASE-T] : Economic feasibility



Vivek,

Discussion is encouraged.  If you believe that there is better text to
help with the economic feasibility, I'd recommend suggesting it.  We did
review on Thursday morning, and had unanimous approval, but if it
requires tweaking, then we should look at that now.

Cheers,
Brad

-----Original Message-----
From: Vivek Telang [mailto:vivek@cicada-semi.com] 
Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2003 1:07 PM
To: George Zimmerman; stds-802-3-10gbt@ieee.org
Subject: [10GBASE-T] : Economic feasibility



George,

You're right, this *is* a discussion of economic feasibility (as the new
Dan-inspired subject line says :)). If my hyperbole annoyed you, I
apologize. Sometimes email doesn't read the way it was written. But
anyway, getting back to business... 

The current 5 Criteria document says:
"The implementation of the 10GBASE-T PHY device is estimated to require
an
approximate complexity level of 1.5 times the currently available quad
1000BASE-T
chip."

I disagree with this statement. But I believe the group voted to approve
this text last week (I had to leave on Wednesday), so I'm not sure if
any further discussion is out of order (Brad?) If so, I'll just shut up
and go away.

If not, then I can't think of any other way to convince ourselves of
this claim than to dig into the numbers. 

Regards,

Vivek
Cicada Semiconductor


> -----Original Message-----
> From: George Zimmerman [mailto:gzimmerman@solarflare.com]
> Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2003 11:27 AM
> To: stds-802-3-10gbt@ieee.org
> Subject: RE: [10GBASE-T] PAR and 5 critters
> 
> 
> 
> Vivek -
> In trying to refocus this discussion on the PAR & 5 criteria, rather
> than a tutorial on specific implementation techniques (I know I can't
> find the same on any state-of-the-art 1000BASE-T part), I tried to
> answer your direct question as to how the numbers were derived, to
> alleviate your concern about double-counting for reductions.  By using
> vendors' stated complexities, I believe there is no double counting.
> 
> I'll refrain from responding to your hyperbole in detail, 
> only to point
> out what you know is that 1000BASE-T parts today represent a 
> high degree
> of circuit and algorithm optimization, which may not necessarily apply
> directly to a 10GBASE-T design.  That's one of many reasons why
> historically, companies that were leaders in one technology aren't
> necessarily leaders in the next step.
> 
> Getting back to the 5 criteria, on technical feasibility, it appears
> that  we are now at a point of discussing economic feasibility of a
> solution (complexity) rather than whether it can be done at all
> (technical feasibility) on a broad market of the installed base
> (including some lengths of Class D & E).  If so, then we've made
> progress.
> 
> George Zimmerman
> gzimmerman@solarflare.com
> tel: (949) 581-6830 ext. 2500
> cell: (310) 920-3860
> 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Vivek Telang [mailto:vivek@cicada-semi.com]
> > Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2003 7:23 AM
> > To: George Zimmerman
> > Cc: stds-802-3-10gbt@ieee.org
> > Subject: RE: [10GBASE-T] PAR and 5 critters
> > 
> > George,
> > 
> > I hope you weren't driving at the time. :)
> > 
> > Unfortunately you didn't answer my question. So I went back and
> re-read
> > your November tutorial (esp. slides 30-35) and it looks like the key
> to
> > your complexity reduction is the use of the MIMO receiver.
> > 
> > But this leads me to a new question. You agreed in a previous email
> that a
> > 10GBASE-T solution based on a "simplest extension" of 
> 1000BASE-T would
> > result in a 45x complexity increase. Your tutorial says that the
> proposed
> > 10GBASE-T receiver complexity is 6x that 1000BASE-T, which is
> > approximately a *7x reduction* from the straightforward 
> approach. If I
> > understand correctly, this reduction results primarily from 
> using the
> MIMO
> > receiver. So would it be reasonable to assume that a 1000BASE-T
> receiver
> > using MIMO would result in a sub-100 mW solution? Wow.
> > 
> > Vivek
> > Cicada Semiconductor
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: George Zimmerman [mailto:gzimmerman@solarflare.com]
> > > Sent: Wednesday, July 30, 2003 8:45 PM
> > > To: Vivek Telang
> > > Cc: stds-802-3-10gbt@ieee.org
> > > Subject: RE: [10GBASE-T] PAR and 5 critters
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > Vivek- I'm writing this from traffic so I'll be brief. The 6x
> > > is based on ops counts of our efficient  realization vs. 1
> > > TOP for a quad  1000BASE--T  reported in both BRCM and
> > > Cicada press releases
> > >
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: "vivek@cicada-semi.com"<vivek@cicada-semi.com>
> > > Sent: 7/30/03 6:31:32 PM
> > > To: "gzimmerman@solarflare.com"<gzimmerman@solarflare.com>
> > > Cc: "stds-802-3-10gbt@ieee.org"<stds-802-3-10gbt@ieee.org>
> > > Subject: RE: [10GBASE-T] PAR and 5 critters
> > >
> > > George,
> > >
> > > Can you walk me through the reduction in complexity from 45x
> > > to 6x. I'm
> > > just talking about the cancelers here (Echo and NEXT). You
> > > don't have to
> > > disclose any IP. Just a broad reference to the technique will
> > > do. I just
> > > want to make sure that you're not double-counting any DSP
> > > techniques that
> > > are already being used to reduce the complexity in today's
> 1000BASE-T
> > > PHYs.
> > >
> > > Regards,
> > >
> > > Vivek
> > > Cicada Semiconductor
> > >
> > > >
> > > > In deference to some of Brad & Bob Grow's earlier
> > > admonition, technical
> > > > feasibility is a matter of increasing confidence as time
> > > moves on. The
> > > > tone of this discussion appears to have moved from the
> > > "can't be done at
> > > > all" to "how much & what kind of silicon will it require".
> > > I will assume
> > > > that we have entered that stage.
> > > >
> > > > We have presented our estimates of feasibility at about 6X
> > > 1000 BASE-T
> > > > and implementable in today's CMOS at the tutorial in November.
> > > > Regardless, there is no doubt that 90nm will be a
> > > commercial processes
> > > > well before 10GBASE-T is through the standards process (at
> > > the earliest
> > > > 2nd half of 2005), and 65nm will be commercial as 10GBASE-T
> > > begins to
> > > > ramp in the subsequent years.
> > > >
> > > > In direct response to Dan's concern, there are a variety of
> > > algorithms
> > > > that do not require closing the loop at the baud rate, (the
> > > simplest of
> > > > which are the look-ahead algorithms which have obvious 
> complexity
> > > > drawbacks), various reduced-state and lower-complexity
> > > forms are well
> > > > studied in the literature, and have been implemented in 
> commercial
> > > > products.  (Dan - you will also see EMI measurements from
> November)
> > > >
> > > > In deference to earlier comments by Vivek & others, yes, if
> > > I just take
> > > > the simplest form of design (direct-form FIR) and multiply up by
> the
> > > > baud rate & # of taps I get a huge complexity multipler
> > > (something like
> > > > the 45X 1000 BASE-T), but just because the
> > > simplest-extension yields a
> > > > huge complexity doesn't mean that it is non-feasible.
> > > Current art in
> > > > efficient and multi-rate filtering algorithms don't scale
> > > linearly as
> > >
> > >
> > > [Message truncated. Tap Edit->Mark for Download to get
> > > remaining portion.]
> > >
> > >
> > >
> 
>