Country for PR: China
Contributor: PR Newswire Asia (China)
Monday, September 28 2020 - 23:56
AsiaNet
Huawei Releases POLAN White Paper: Enabling Enterprise Campus Network Transformation
SHANGHAI, Sept. 28, 2020 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

During HUAWEI CONNECT 2020, Huawei commissioned an IDC White Paper titled IT 
Decision-maker Insights: POLAN as an Enabler of Enterprise Campus 
Transformation. According to the White Paper, IT decision makers are rethinking 
their campus network strategies as digital transformation speeds up faced with 
the COVID-19 pandemic. Compared with conventional solutions, the passive 
optical LAN (POLAN) solution offers advantages in terms of bandwidth, O&M, 
power consumption, and total cost of ownership (TCO). In the next five years, 
POLAN will be widely used across various industries and become a solid 
foundation for reimagining enterprise services. 

The white paper's findings are based on a web survey with IT decision makers at 
318 large- and medium-sized enterprises in select countries across multiple 
industries, including education, government, healthcare, transportation, and 
real estate. The custom survey was commissioned by Huawei, and was designed, 
conducted and analyzed by IDC. It provides detailed policy reference and 
guidance for the construction of enterprise campus networks in the digital era. 

According to the white paper, the campus network solution preferred by 
enterprises must feature a simplified network architecture, simple management, 
low cost, and flexible capacity expansion to meet future requirements. 

The white paper also shares five reasons why POLAN will become a mainstream 
campus network solution in the context of digital transformation, detailed 
below.

- Meeting future bandwidth requirements
 
In the near future, HD videos and IoT applications will grow exponentially, and 
continuously push up bandwidth requirements. Compared with copper cables, 
optical cables provide higher bandwidth and capacity, and support continuous 
bandwidth upgrades without re-cabling. For example, the Dubai Creek Harbor has 
adopted the POLAN solution to carry hotel IoT and video services based on the 
10G PON technology, meeting their requirements projected for the next 10 years. 
The technology and bandwidth can be upgraded without replacing the transmission 
media, thereby protecting customer investment. 

- Providing premium network experience

Compared with traditional copper cables, fibers feature low latency, high 
reliability, and anti-electromagnetic interference. This enables fiber lines to 
meet the requirements of new campus applications such as video conferencing, 
security surveillance, AR/VR interaction, and IoT. A national bank has adopted 
the POLAN solution in its office building to modernize its office network and 
carry all services, including wired office, digital enhanced cordless telephone 
voice, wireless AP backhaul, and IoT access. 

- Improving network O&M efficiency by up to 60%

Compared with traditional campus network solutions, the POLAN solution has a 
simpler architecture. Only OLTs need to be managed. Terminals support plug and 
play, and faulty terminals can be directly replaced, greatly reducing the O&M 
workload. In addition, passive splitters replace a large number of active 
aggregation devices, reducing the possibility of faults. Fudan University has 
adopted the POLAN solution as part of its efforts to build a smart campus with 
a simplified architecture and minimal cable deployment. The solution simplifies 
fault locating and capacity expansion, and reduces the O&M cost. 

- Power consumption 30% lower, making the world greener

The POLAN solution reconstructs the campus network from multi-layer to 
two-layer. As the network structure is flattened, fewer IT equipment rooms are 
required, and the power consumption of devices and equipment room ventilation 
is effectively reduced by 30%. A famous hotel in Yunnan China adopted the POLAN 
solution for this purpose, revolutionizing their network infrastructure. Thanks 
to long-distance transmission and multi-service bearing, the network supports 
Wi-Fi, voice, HD TV, and hot spring intelligent control, sparing the need for 
hundreds of equipment rooms. The annual power consumption is reduced by 100,000 
kWh, equivalent to 47.5 tons less carbon emission or 2,065 more trees planted. 

- Reducing network construction CAPEX by 20%

Not only is fiber capable of providing better services, it has obvious physical 
advantages in size, weight, and capacity expansion capability. According to IDC 
survey, customers agree that POLAN can be deployed and operated more easily and 
efficiently, and reduce the CAPEX by around 20%. 

Rohit Mehra, Vice President of IDC, said: "As more data collection and analysis 
tasks are increasingly pushed to the enterprise edge, campus networks become a 
solid foundation for enterprise service innovation. More and more enterprises 
will look favorably at POLAN solutions to leverage latest technologies for an 
improved user experience, increase service revenue, and to speed up 
digitization." 

Jinhui Wang, President of Marketing Execution, Huawei Transmission & Access, 
said: "The result of this in-depth survey accurately reflects the expectations 
of enterprise IT decision makers for campus network construction. We believe 
that in the next few years, the POLAN solution will be rapidly deployed in many 
industries, including education, hotel, and transportation. Huawei will 
continue to invest in solutions and industry ecosystem construction to enable 
ubiquitous optical connections." 

For more information, please download the white paper at 
https://e.huawei.com/en/solutions/enterprise-transmission-access/campus-optix-polan-idc-white-paper


SOURCE: Huawei
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