AT&T U-verse


AT&T U-verse, commonly called U-verse, was an AT&T brand of triple-play telecommunications services, although the brand is now only used in reference to the IPTV service. Launched on June 26, 2006, U-verse included broadband Internet, IP telephone, and IPTV services in 48 states.
In September 2016, AT&T announced that the "U-verse" brand would no longer apply to its broadband and phone services, renaming them "AT&T Internet" and "AT&T Phone", respectively.

History

SBC announced its plans for a fiber-optic network and Internet Protocol television deployment in 2004 and unveiled the name "U-verse" for the suite of network services in 2005. SBC eventually became AT&T in late 2005, and the AT&T name was applied for the service. Beta testing began in San Antonio in 2005 and AT&T U-verse was commercially launched June 26, 2006, in San Antonio. A few months later on November 30, 2006, the service was launched in Houston. In December 2006, the product launched in Chicago, San Francisco, Oakland, Hartford, Indianapolis, and other cities in their vicinities. In February 2007, U-verse was launched in Milwaukee. One month later service was initiated in Dallas and Kansas City. In May 2007, U-verse launched in Detroit, Los Angeles, and surrounding areas. Launch continued in Cleveland, Akron, and San Diego in June 2007. The Oklahoma City and Sacramento launches occurred in August 2007. In November 2007, service was started in Austin. In December 2007, U-verse was launched in Orlando and St. Louis. A controlled launch was also initiated in Atlanta that month marking the first launch in the Southeastern United States. On December 22, 2008, the product debuted in Birmingham. On January 25, 2010, AT&T announced that U-verse was available to over 2.8 million households.
AT&T Phone was added on January 22, 2008, and was first available in Detroit. In 2008, U-verse availability approached 8 million households and over 225,000 customers had been enrolled, with new installations reaching 12,000 per week. By 2009, 1 million Phone customers and 2.1 million U-verse TV customers had been enrolled.
At the end of 2011, U-verse was available to more than 30 million living units in 22 states and U-verse TV had 3.8 million customers. By mid-2012, AT&T had 4.1 million U-Verse TV subscribers, 2.6 million Phone subscribers, and 6.5 million Internet subscribers.
By the third quarter of 2012, AT&T had 4.3 million TV subscribers, 2.7 million Phone subscribers and 7.1 million Internet. This represents 7% growth quarter on quarter. The actual number of customers is lower, as most customers subscribe to a bundle and so are counted in both categories.
At an analyst meeting in August 2015, following AT&T's acquisition of satellite provider DirecTV, AT&T announced plans for a new "home entertainment gateway" platform that will converge DirecTV and U-verse around a common platform based upon DirecTV hardware with "very thin hardware profiles". AT&T Entertainment and Internet Services CEO John Stankey explained that the new platform would offer "single truck roll installation for multiple products, live local streaming, improved content portability, over-the-top integration for mobile broadband, and user interface re-engineering."
In February 2016, Bloomberg reported that AT&T was in the process of phasing out the U-verse IPTV service by encouraging new customers to purchase DirecTV satellite service instead, and by ending the production of new set-top boxes for the service. An AT&T spokesperson denied that U-verse was being shut down and explained that the company was "leading its video marketing approach with DirecTV" to "realize the many benefits" of the purchase, but would still recommend U-verse TV if it better-suited a customer's needs. AT&T CFO John Stephens had also previously stated that DirecTV's larger subscriber base as a national service gave the service a higher degree of leverage in negotiating carriage deals, thus resulting in lower content costs.
On March 29, 2016, AT&T announced that it would increase data caps on its Internet service on May 23, 2016.
On May 16, 2016, AT&T acquired Quickplay Media, a cloud-based platform that powers over-the-top video services.
On September 19, 2016, AT&T announced that the "U-verse" brand would no longer apply to its broadband and phone services, renaming them "AT&T Internet" and "AT&T Phone", respectively. AT&T adopted "AT&T Fiber" as the new brand name for its fiber-based internet service, with the "AT&T Internet" brand continuing to be used for its DSL internet service.
On April 25, 2017, AT&T reported that it had lost 233,000 subscribers in the first quarter of 2017.
In selected markets, AT&T began to replace AT&T U-verse TV with a new service based on its DirecTV Now platform, AT&T TV, in August 2019.

Services

AT&T delivers most U-verse service over a fiber-to-the-node or fiber-to-the-premises communications network. In the more common FTTN deployment, fiber-optic connections carry all data between the service provider and a distribution node. The remaining run from the node to the network interface device in the customer's home uses a copper-wire current loop that is traditionally part of the PSTN. In more recently constructed housing developments, AT&T uses an FTTP deployment—they run fiber-optic cable from their DSLAM all the way to an optical network terminal in the customer's home.
In areas where AT&T deploys U-verse through FTTN, they use High-speed digital subscriber lines with ADSL2+ or VDSL technology. Service offerings depend on the customer's distance to an available port in the distribution node, or the central office. To qualify for U-verse TV service, the customer must be less than 3500 feet from a VRAD, the VRAD must contain an available port, and the copper wire-loop must pass qualification. Where pair bonding is available, the maximum service distance can extend to 5500 feet.
In so-called "fringe" areas, AT&T provides High Speed Internet through IP-DSLAM ADSL2+, which does not require pair bonding or a VRAD and operates at slower bitrates than pair-bonded VDSL2. In practice, VRADs are not installed in many older urban neighborhoods as AT&T prepares to abandon the fixed-line broadband market.

Television

AT&T uses the Ericsson Mediaroom platform to deliver U-verse TV via IPTV from the headend to the consumer's receiver, required for each TV. Transmissions use digital H.264 encoding, compared to the existing deployments of MPEG-2 codec and the discontinued analog cable TV system. The receiver box does not have a RF tuner, but is an IP multicast client that requests the channel or "stream" desired. U-Verse TV supports up to four/six active streams at once, depending on service tier. The system uses individual unicasts for video on demand, central time shifting, start-over services and other programs.

U-verse TV packages

AT&T groups its general channels into progressive packages ; each adds channels to the package before it, with rare exceptions. All subscribers receive at least the equivalent of the U-family package, which also includes 65 of the 75 Stingray Music channels. Many U-family channels were also available on the historical U-basic package. The historical U400 package is identical to the U450 package, except that U450 automatically includes the HD Services package.
Specialty channels are grouped into a la carte packages, which can be combined with the general packages: The Sports Package; ESPN College Extra; Fox Soccer Plus HD; NBA League Pass; HD Services; HD Premium Tier; Paquete Español; and Adult. Paquete Español can be combined with a higher-tier package and is then called U200 Latino, U300 Latino, or U450 Latino. Additionally, channels grouped as Internationals are available a la carte in language groups or singly, and a number of premium movie packages are available to premium package or higher-tier subscribers. High-definition TV technology is required to access HD channels.
U-verse during most of its lifespan had 5 member channels: ATTention, Buzz, Front Row, Showcase, Sports, and U-verse Movies . These removed from the AT&T U-verse TV channel lineup on February 26, 2016.

Channel groupings

AT&T Internet provides Internet access to computers connected on-premises via Ethernet cabling or Wi-Fi from the included residential gateway or DSL modem.
AT&T Fiber, or as it is known AT&T Internet powered by Fiber, provides fiber to the home service in select markets. Historically a form of AT&T Fiber Internet launched in the fall of 2013 branded as GigaPower, and bundled with U-verse TV as "U-verse with GigaPower". In 2014, it launched in Austin, Texas with 300Mbps speeds, but as of 2014 top download speeds have increased to 1Gpbs. In 2019, AT&T rolled out 100% Fiber Network Powered by AT&T Fiber Live in 84 Metro areas.

AT&T announced Internet 18 service in November 2008, and Internet 24 was announced in December 2009. Basic, Express, Pro, Elite and Max are usually available for self-installation. Max, Max Plus, and Max Turbo can be self-installed if only one jack is connected for DSL, or splitter-free if no landline shares the pair. Conditions where higher speeds are still attainable through filters or quality wiring to more than one jack occur less often.
AT&T announced Internet 45 service on August 26, 2013. Internet 45 required two conditioned line pairs and a Motorola NVG589 VDSL2+ Gateway. AT&T charges a service fee to condition and pair bond the lines and install a new gateway, plus additional monthly charges.
Upload speeds are VDSL connections in areas that offer U-verse TV. ADSL2+ is limited to a maximum of 1 Mbit/s upload in areas that do not offer U-verse TV.
NameDownload Speed Upload Speed ConnectionNotes
Internet Basic 55 Mbit/s1 Mbit/sVDSL or ADSL2+Upload speeds up to 768 kbit/s with ADSL2+
Internet 1010 Mbit/s1 Mbit/sVDSL or ADSL2+Upload speeds up to 1 Mbit/s with ADSL2+
Internet 2525 Mbit/s5 Mbit/sVDSL2
Internet 5050 Mbit/s10 Mbit/sVDSL2Select markets
Internet 7575 Mbit/s20 Mbit/sVDSL2Select markets
Internet 100100 Mbit/s20 Mbit/sVDSL2Select markets
Internet 100s100 Mbit/s100 Mbit/sFTTH
Internet 300300 Mbit/s300 Mbit/sFTTH
Internet 10001000 Mbit/s1000 Mbit/sFTTH

Home Phone

AT&T Phone is a voice communication service delivered over AT&T's IP network. This phone service is digital and provides a voicemail service accessed by *98 from the home number. Customers who subscribe to both AT&T Phone and U-verse TV get features such as call history on channel 9900, which displays the last 100 missed and answered calls on the customer's TV, and "Click to Call" from the TV history. AT&T Phone includes Caller ID, Call Blocking, Anonymous Call Blocker, and many other calling features. AT&T Phone was first available in Detroit, on January 22, 2008.

Equipment

Line equipment

U-verse uses the Alcatel-Lucent 7330 or 7340 Intelligent Services Access Manager shelf, also called a video-ready access device, deployed either in a central office or to a neighborhood serving area interface. These models are both composed of circuit boards providing service, which are fed by fiber. FTTN systems use model 7330, which uses existing copper wiring to customers' homes, leading to distance limitations from the VRAD cabinet to the customer's home. The 7330 ISAM is an internet protocol DSL access multiplexer that supports VDSL and ADSL protocols. FTTP systems use model 7340, mostly in areas such as new neighborhoods or large housing developments, where AT&T chooses to run fiber to the household, removing the distance limitations of copper. The 7340 then connects to a serving area interface, which distributes service to homes in the neighborhood, via a dual strand fiber, which then splits into 32 customer fiber pairs. The fiber pairs typically lead to a customer's residence at the network interface device.
The VRAD typically connects upstream to an Alcatel-Lucent 7450 Ethernet service switch in the central office hub, then to the headend video hub office.

Customer equipment

AT&T provides the customer premises equipment, and includes a wireless router and modem, which they call a residential gateway or internet gateway. They also provide TV receivers made by Cisco and Arris .
Those eligible for triple play will use a VDSL2 transport link which uses one of the following modems:
Those who are eligible for double play only, will use an ADSL2+ transport type which uses one of the following modems:
Currently four devices support bonded pair: the 2Wire iNID, Arris NVG589 and NVG599, and Pace 5268AC. The Motorola NVG589 originally replaced the 2Wire iNID for all bonded pair installs. The NVG599 and 5268AC both have replaced the NVG589 and are used interchangeably. These three devices are capable of both ADSL2+ and VDSL.
All AT&T U-verse transport types use 802.1x authentication. This means only equipment on AT&T's approved list works with the U-verse service, as other equipment cannot authenticate with AT&T DSLAMs and GPONs. Another side-effect of U-verse's authentication protocol is the lack of bridge mode support. At best, the 2Wire/Pace routers support DMZ+ mode, while the Motorola devices support IP Passthrough. AT&T allows residential and business customers to pay for static IP addresses, which they support on all AT&T approved equipment
When AT&T launched IP-DSL, they installed connections with either the 2Wire 2701HGV-B or Motorola 2210. The 2Wire 2701HGV-B was limited to a top speed of 6Mbit/s, while the Motorola 2210 was capable of higher speeds. In later installations, AT&T standardized on the Motorola NVG510, phasing out the other routers for new service installation.
When AT&T introduced the Internet 45 tier in 2013, installations were initially done with the iNID. AT&T later standardized on the Motorola NVG589, which supports pair-bonding for both ADSL2+ and VDSL2. AT&T also uses the NVG589 in some installations where the customer otherwise is too far from a node for service. Additionally, it supports an internal battery for those who subscribe to AT&T Phone service for battery backup during power failures. AT&T no longer supplies the battery to customers for any residential service.
DeviceTransport TypeStatic IPWireless SupportBridge Mode Type
2Wire 3600/3800/3801VDSL2
ONT
Yes802.11b/gDMZ+
2Wire 5031NVVDSL2
Also known to work on ADSL2+
Yes802.11b/g
802.11n
DMZ+
2Wire 270HGV-BADSL2+Yes802.11b/gDMZ+
2Wire iNIDVDSL2 Bonded PairYes802.11b/gDMZ+
Motorola NVG510ADSL2+Yes802.11b/g
802.11n
IP Passthrough
Arris NVG589ADSL2+
VDSL2
ADSL2+ Bonded Pair
VDSL2 Bonded Pair
ONT
Yes802.11b/g
802.11n
IP Passthrough
Arris NVG599ADSL2+
VDSL2
ADSL2+ Bonded Pair
VDSL2 Bonded Pair
ONT
Yes802.11b/g
Dual-Band 802.11n/AC
IP Passthrough
Motorola 2210ADSL2+No-IP Passthrough
Pace 5268ACADSL2+
VDSL2
ADSL2+ Bonded Pair
VDSL2 Bonded Pair
ONT
Yes802.11b/g
Dual-Band 802.11n/AC
DMZ+
Arris BGW210ADSL2+
VDSL2
ADSL2+ Bonded Pair
VDSL2 Bonded Pair
ONT
Yes802.11b/g
Dual-Band 802.11n/AC
IP Passthrough