Revenue from 10-, 40- and 100-Gigabit optical transceivers sold into the enterprise and data center markets grew 21 percent in 2014 to $1.4 billion, almost entirely due to increased 40G QSFP (quad small form factor pluggable) spending, according to a new report from Infonetics.
“40G transceivers are ramping up hard as data centers deploy 40GbE, particularly as a high-density 10G interface via breakout cables. 40G QSFP demand growth over single-mode fiber is primarily a result of large shipments to internet content providers Microsoft and Google,” said Andrew Schmitt, research director for carrier transport networking at IHS Infonetics.
“The market for 100G data center optics is accelerating, but it has yet to be turbocharged by widespread data center deployment in the way 40G QSFP optics have. This will change dramatically in 2016 as cheap 100G silicon reaches production and QSFP28 shipments surge as a result,” Schmitt said. “Next year is going to be huge for 100GbE.”
IHS Infonetics’ biannual 10G/40G/100G Data Center Optics market size and forecast report tracks in granular detail optical transceivers, or short reach optics, by speed, reach, wavelength and form factor. Some highlights:
Data center transceivers account for 65 percent of the overall (telecom and datacom) 10G/40G/100G optical transceiver market
Total 40G transceiver revenue grew 81 percent in the second half of 2014 (2H14) over the same period a year ago (2H13)
10G shipments in the data center continue to grow at healthy rates, but are being impacted by growth of 40G interfaces used as high-density 10G interfaces
Meanwhile, worldwide revenue for client 10G modules was flat on a year-over year basis in 2014
IHS Infonetics expects the datacom optical transceiver market to grow to over $2.1 billion by 2019.
http://www.infonetics.com
Monday, May 11, 2015
Infonetics: Market for 100G Data Center Transceivers is Accelerating
Monday, May 11, 2015
100G, Data Centers, Infonetics, Research