Tuesday, May 20, 2003

BT and Toshiba Launch "Hotspot in a Box"

BT and Toshiba have launched a "hotsot in a box" initiative designed to appeal to thousands of local businesses in the UK - like small hotels, bookshops and golf clubs - who want to offer Wi-Fi to their customers. Toshiba will manufacture the hotspot technology and BT will be the wireless ISP. Roaming agreements between the two companies are designed to link up BT's Openzone network with Toshiba's global hotspots. The local hotspots created using the product from BT and Toshiba will be in addition to the BT Openzone access points that will be available in 1,300 pubs and clubs by the end of the year, as a result of a deal with The Cloud. BT said it is now committed to deliver 4,000 hotspots by the summer 2004, rather than 2005.
http://www.bt.com

Tropos Networks Unveils Cellular Wi-Fi Architecture

Tropos Networks (formerly FHP Wireless), a start-up based in San Mateo, California, unveiled a cellular Wi-Fi mesh networking system designed to provide city-sized coverage at a fraction of the cost of current hot-spot architectures. Rather than having wireline backhaul at each Wi-Fi node, Tropos creates an intelligent, switch mesh among overlapping Wi-Fi cells. Routing intelligence embedded into each node enables the Wi-Fi cells to self-organize and, using wireless backhaul, forward data to each other along the optimal path to a wired network connection. The concept has been field-proven by Coastside Net, a wireless ISP that is operating a Tropos network in Half Moon Bay, California. Tropos said its Wi-Fi cellular concept is also being adopted by several U.S. municipalities, which are building city-wide Wi-Fi to provide wireless data to police cars and for public access. Tropos' product line includes both indoor and outdoor (telephone pole or light pole mounted) access points with the embedded mesh networking software. Tropos estimates that a typical network cost will range from $20,000 to $50,000 per square mile, depending on the geography and RF environment.
http://www.troposnetworks.com

D-Link Offers Outdoor Wireless Access Points and Bridges

D-Link introduced two Wi-Fi products designed specifically for outside use, the AirPremier Outdoor Wireless Access Point and the AirPremier Outdoor Wireless Bridge/Router. Both devices feature a die-cast watertight housing with built-in lightning protection, Power-over-Ethernet (PoE) functionality, extended range, advanced firewall features and compatibly with existing 802.11b compliant devices. The D-Link AirPremier Outdoor Wireless Access Point has a range of up to 600 meters. When paired with a D-Link High-Gain Directional Antenna, the D-Link AirPremier Outdoor Wireless Bridge/Router can connect two networks from up to 40 km (25 miles) away.
http://www.dlink.com

CIRPACK Softswitches Deployed in Belgium

IRISnet, the Region of Brussels' high speed network jointly operated by Mobistar and Telindus on behalf of the regional government, is deploying CIRPACK's softswitches to provide packet telephony over broadband local loops. Cirpack switches are now replacing existing voice infrastructure equipment to connect users' ISDN PBXs to the IRISnet IP/ATM backbone, and later provide voice services directly over IP or ATM networks. Cirpack's equipment manages all voice services and provides the link to Mobistar's network. Financial terms were not disclosed.
http://www.cirpack.com
http://www.irisnet.be

U.S. Army Awards $50M Network Upgrade Contract to Lucent

The U.S. Army awarded a multi-year, $50 million contract to Lucent Technologies for a major data infrastructure upgrade at Army installations in North America and Asia. Lucent will provide a range of professional services, including planning, design, implementation and operations in support of the upgrade, as well as on-going maintenance, program management and engineering services throughout the duration of the contracts. Lucent also is working to integrate the upgraded network into the existing multi-vendor Army environment.
http://www.lucent.com

Canada's SaskTel First to Deploy Nortel's Succession VoIP

SaskTel, the incumbent service provider in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan, signed a US$5 million contract for the supply of Nortel Networks Multimedia Communications Portfolio and Succession VoIP equipment. SaskTel is expected to be the first service provider worldwide to offer new revenue-generating multimedia and packet voice services using Nortel Networks Succession equipment. SaskTel is evolving its Nortel DMS circuit switched network to the Succession Communication Server 2000 platform. In addition, SaskTel will deploy Nortel Networks Passport Packet Voice Gateways (PVGs) to expand its network reach and Nortel Networks Universal Signaling Point to interface between classic SS7 signaling and next generation IP and ATM packet networks. SaskTel will use the network for SIP-based hosted multimedia and packet voice services for both residential and business customers.
http://www.sasktel.com
http://www.nortelnetworks.com
  • SaskTel serves more than 425,000 customers in over 50 communities throughout Saskatchewan.

Sweden's Tele 2 Selects Tellabs' Next Gen SDH

Tele 2 Sverige AB, a competitive service provider, is deploying the Tellabs 6300 managed transport series to integrate Ethernet into its existing network. Specifically, Tele2 is using the new Tellabs 6350 switch node, a digital cross-connect, and the Tellabs 6310, an edge node platform for access and customer premise installations Applications supported by the Tellabs 6310 include 2 Mbps, 34/45 Mbps, Fast Ethernet and ATM services. All of the Tellabs 6300 managed transport system elements are monitored and managed end-to-end from a single network management platform. Financial terms were not disclosed.
http://www.tellabs.com

Indiana's Hancock Telecom Selects Extreme Networks for Ethernet/FTTH

Hancock Telecom, part of a statewide consortium of telecommunications providers in Indiana, selected Extreme Networks' BlackDiamond switching platform with 10 Gigabit Ethernet to meet present and future network needs. High-speed Ethernet delivered over fiber will be made available to consumers for intensive applications such as uncompressed IP video and VoD. Extreme Networks said it captured the number one market share position for Layer 3 10 Gigabit Ethernet port shipments, according to Q1 2003 figures reported by the Dell'Oro Group.
http://www.extremenetworks.com
http://www.hancocktel.com

VSNL and ITXC Double VoIP Capacity in India

Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited (VSNL), an international service provider and ISP in India, and ITXC have doubled their network capacity to handle increasing volume of VoIP traffic. As a result of an interconnect agreement signed in October 2002, VSNL benefits from call termination minutes and revenue originated from all over the world. ITXC brings global traffic to VSNL across ITXC.net. Last month, ITXC announced that ITXC.net carried 10% of all incoming traffic to India during the first year following deregulation in that country. The interconnect is based on Cisco's Voice Infrastructure and Applications (VIA) solution.
http://www.itxc.comhttp://internet.vsnl.com

China Netcom Launches Fixed Wireless in Beijing with UTStarcom

Beijing China Netcom awarded a contract valued at $57.9 million for deployment of UTStarcom's IP-based PAS (Personal Access System) (iPAS) platform in central Beijing. UTStarcom's softswitch-based iPAS system will offer comprehensive voice and data services to customers in a 400-square-kilometer area in the central city area of Beijing. Beijing China Netcom is launching the fixed wireless service this week targeting large corporate users such as government institutions, hospitals, and universities. Once deployment is complete, PAS will be available to consumers throughout all of Beijing, as well as in the 10 surrounding county-level cities. Beijing China Netcom is also offering SMS with the service and plans to gradually add wireless Internet access, wireless email, and online content browsing. UTStarcom and Beijing China Netcom have co-donated US$1.2 million worth of PAS infrastructure, phones, and handsets to three hospitals in Beijing to help doctors and patients affected by SARS.
http://www.utstarcom.com
http://www.cnc.net.cn

FLAG Telecom Enhances Its European Network with Verizon

FLAG Telecom will enhance the reach of its European network through an agreement with Verizon Global Solutions. This agreement is a key element in FLAG's global network plan. FLAG will also open new POPs in Amsterdam and Frankfurt to provide seamless connectivity to its submarine cable systems: FLAG Atlantic-1 (FA-1), FLAG Europe Asia (FEA) and FLAG North Asia Loop (FNAL). Financial terms were not disclosed.
http://www.flagtelecom.com
  • In March 2003, FLAG Telecom announced a capacity expansion to key segments of its cable system from Western Europe to Japan through the Middle East, India, Southeast Asia and China. This upgrade will double the system's capacity on key segments from the U.K. to the Middle East (from 10 Gbps to 20 Gbps).


  • In February 2003, FLAG Telecom named Patrick Gallagher as its new CEO, replacing Mark Spagnolo who retains his position on the company's board of directors. Gallagher previously served with British Telecom, including five years as the Chief Executive of BT Europe and, most recently, as the Group Director for Strategy and Development also with responsibility for Japan, China, and investments in France, Italy, Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia and Korea.


  • In October 2002, FLAG emerged from Chapter 11 with its network in tact and a significantly lower level of debt. Verizon originally was one of the principal shareholders in FLAG Telecom.

SBC Handles 100 Million Calls for American Idol Final Voting Night

SBC Communications handled more than 260 million calls during the three-hour voting window for television's American Idol competition on Tuesday night -- over 100 million calls greater than a typical three-hour period of weeknight calling, an 80% spike in traffic.
http://www.sbc.com

Lucent Updates Network Management Software

Lucent Technologies released a new version of its VitalSuite Network Management software featuring new tools to identify the root cause of network performance events, such as potential and actual overloads, equipment failures and traffic issues. Some of the key enhancements in the VitalSuite 9.1 software include: topographical views of the network allowing administrators to investigate and accurately diagnose potential problems quickly; enhanced support for monitoring applications over WiFi (802.11b) and 3G networks; and additional capabilities for visual end-to-end monitoring.
http://www.lucent.com/vital

UTStarcom Signs $20 Million Contract with China Telecom Guangdong

UTStarcom signed a contract expansion valued at approximately $20 million with China Telecom Guangdong province for additional handsets for new subscribers, as well as expansion of its IP-based PAS (Personal Access System). In April, five cities in Guangzhou province launched low-cost, fixed wireless local telephony service using UTStarcom's PAS. Demand for the service has been strong, with nearly 300,000 subscribers added in less than two months of service. Additionally, China Telecom Guangdong province will soon offer value-added services with PAS, such as short messaging service (SMS). As of April 2003, more than 10 million local lines in China were provided with UTStarcom's PAS technology.
http://www.utstarcom.com
http://www.chinatelecom.com.cn

Verizon Sees Fastest Growth in Consumer Services

Despite the most challenging environment in memory, a focus on fundamentals has enabled Verizon to emerge from the telecom storm with a stronger business model, said Doreen Toben, Verizon CFO, speaking at the Banc of America "Media, Telecommunications, and Media" conference in New York.
She highlighted consumer services, which already represent the largest percentage of Verizon revenues, as the fastest area of growth and the segment with the greatest upside potential for the company. In the past two weeks, Verizon has launched several initiatives to improve its DSL value proposition: it committed to an accelerated network rollout schedule aimed at creating "the largest broadband footprint in the US;" it cut DSL prices to $29 or lower per month for customers choosing a service bundle, it increased the base DSL speed from 768 kbps to 1.5 Mbps, it began offering MSN 8 features in partnership with Microsoft, and it offered to provide DSL subscribers with free Wi-Fi access from 1,000 hotspots in NYC. The company is expecting a surge of new DSL subscribers. Nevertheless, Verizon continues to lose local access lines both to UNE-P competitors as well as for technology substitution as consumers cancel second phone lines to the home. Toben said Verizon's consumer bundling initiative to provide local access, unlimited national long distance, DSL and wireless service on one bill will combat this trend. Local line loss trends already moderated in Q1 from their downward spiral in Q3 and Q4 2002, apparently due to success with the bundling initiative. Prices have since been cut further. More importantly, Toben stressed a need to make the various consumer services work together. To this end, Verizon will introduce a "Digital Companion" in the next few weeks that will provide an integrated address book for all wireline and wireless calls. The address book will combine Caller ID, email, paging and instant messaging contacts. It will synchronize personal calendar data across devices. A Digital Companion online portal will also provide a common box for wireline and wireless voicemail, real-time call logs, and the ability to launch teleconferences or IM sessions. The partnership with MSN is also expected to create greater subscriber "stickiness," reducing churn and providing greater opportunity to upsell customers to other premium services.


Verizon believes there is still plenty of opportunity to grow its wireless voice subscriber base by taking share from competitors. On the wireless data side, Toben predicts "nothing but growth ahead." During Q1, billed SMS was up 49% (200 million messages in March), 1x data usage was up 77%, and "Get It Now" downloads increased 120% (more than 2 million ringtones and games in March) compared to Q4 2002. Service ARPU was up 3% in Q1 to $47.20.


Verizon's business strategy will also focus on bundled services, an enhanced data portfolio, and an aggressive customer win-back campaign. Verizon hopes the new bundles will turn the tide on UNE-P losses for business customers as well. The company will continue to lobby for regulatory relief.


For the long term, Toben believes Verizon can achieve a sustainable cost advantage over its competitors by using new technology to gain network efficiency, using e-commerce to handle consumer and business billing and customer support, establishing better process automation to integrate facilities and logistics, and by combining advertising and sales strategies across its various customer segments. Verizon's financial guidance for 2003 remains unchanged. The webcast is available on the Verizon investor relations web page.http://investor.verizon.com/news/20030521/20030521.pdf
  • For Q1 2003, Verizon reported 160,000 net additional DSL lines, compared to 148,000 net DSL additions in Q4 2002. The company ended Q1 with 1.83 million DSL lines billed.


  • Also in Q1 2003, Verizon reported 710,000 net additional long distance lines, giving it a total of 13.2 million LD lines. There was a 23% growth quarter-over-quarter in LD revenue.


  • There was stabilization or improvement in access line trends due to the popularity of unlimited local+LD service bundles. The number of UNE-P lines rose by 386,000 to 3.57 million lines, compared to 445,000 UNE-P new lines provided to competitors in Q4 2002. The number of resale lines declined by 50,000 to 999,000.

Monday, May 19, 2003

Multi-Vendor Metro Ethernet Services Demo Planned for SuperComm

The Metro Ethernet Forum (MEF) will host a multi-vendor interoperability demonstration of carrier-grade metro Ethernet services at the upcoming SUPERCOMM exhibition in Atlanta. The interoperability demo consists of 22 company specific access (aggregation) networks interconnected via a 10G Ethernet switched core. The 22 equipment suppliers will demonstrate E-Line (Ethernet Line) and E-LAN (Ethernet LAN) services, which were recently defined by the Metro Ethernet Forum. The interoperable E-Line and E-LAN services will carry webcam video at a committed information rate (CIR) of 10 Mbps as well as transparent LAN connectivity at 20 Mbps.
http://www.metroethernetforum.org








Ericsson Wins DSL Expansion Contract in China

Jiangxi Nanchang Telecom, part of China Telecom, awarded an extension contract to Ericsson to further the rollout of its DSL network in Nanchang, capital city of Jiangxi province. The ADSL lines will be delivered using Ericsson's new ultra-compact Ethernet DSLAM. The solution enables standard ADSL lines to be offered economically at smaller sites (starting from eight subscribers) as well as medium to large sites (up to thousands of subscribers). Ethernet, instead of ATM, is used in the second mile network.
http://www.ericsson.com

SBC Cites Growth Opportunities in DSL, Long Distance

SBC is growing increasingly optimistic, according to William Daley, president of SBC Communications, as the company becomes more confident in weathering the telecom storm and executing its business plan. Daley, who spoke at the Banc of America "Media, Telecommunications, and Media" conference in New York, said the thinking at SBC is changing from "survival mode" to "growing the business."
In what its expects to be a fiercely competitive industry, SBC intends to become the top telecom service provider in the US. Daley highlighted financial disciple as a key factor in its overall health. The company has reduced its costs in every operational category, except for pension costs. SBC is currently enjoying an upturn in growth rates for long distance and DSL services, offsetting continuing losses in local access lines. SBC has experienced 5 straight quarters of accelerated growth for DSL subscriptions. Regarding DSL pricing, Daly said price cuts are "nothing new," as SBC has had a $29 per month introductory offer since last fall. Daley acknowledged that at some point it will be critical for SBC to offer video as a bundled consumer service, but he said debate goes on inside the company about the best way to achieve this end -- whether through partnerships with satellite providers or a new buildout in its access network.


In consumer long distance, SBC has already established 13% of consumer long distance penetration in California in its first four months. However, SBC continues to lose access lines to UNE-P competitors. Although the access line losses moderated in Q1, Daley said it is too soon to say that SBC has turned a corner regarding UNE-P losses. Reversing the UNE-P trend is a high priority for SBC, said Daley, as non-union, UNE-P competitors continue to erode the economics of delivering local access services. SBC will continue to pressure regulators to offer "fair" prices for its unbundled loops. He cited a recent decision in Illinois to raise the wholesale rates for UNE-P elements as a reason for optimism. He acknowledged that pressure from the AFL-CIO and other unions were instrumental in getting the Illinois state legislature to raise the wholesale rates. SBC hopes a similar process will be seen in other states.
http://www.sbc.com
  • In Q1 2003, SBC added 270,000 DSL subscribers, bringing its total to 2.5 million. The addressable DSL footprint now covers 66% of SBC's consumer and small business lines. SBC expects DSL to be EBITDA positive on a total product basis in early 2004.


  • In Q1 2003, SBC added 1.5 million long-distance lines, bringing its total to 7.6 million.


  • Also in Q1 2003, SBC's local voice revenues declined 9.2% year-over-year and 3.1% sequentially, reflecting declines in retail access lines. Total access lines declined by 405,000 in Q1, compared with a decline of 545,000 in Q4 2002 and a decline of 496,000 in Q1 2002. Retail access lines declined by 1.05 million, 70% of which were for consumers. SBC lost 770,000 retail access lines to UNE-P competitors, compared with a loss of 810,000 UNE-P lines in Q4 2002. At the end of Q1, SBC was serving 5.784 million UNE-P lines and 1.754 million UNE-L loops.

Tropic Launches its Reconfigurable Optical Add/Drop Multiplexer

Tropic Networks, a start-up based in Ottawa, Canada, has added reconfigurable optical add/drop multiplexer (R-OADM) capabilities to its TRX-24000 metro DWDM platform. The new capability gives service providers any-wavelength-at-any-node reconfigurability with zero service disruption. Tropic said its Open Photonic Layer approach to metro-regional optical networking enables interworking with the existing installed equipment base. In addition to R-OADM capability, the Tropic platform features a Wavelength Tracker technology and the ability to transparently re-use wavelengths from third party sources (virtually eliminating O-E-O conversions).
http://www.tropicnetworks.com/
  • In February 2003, Tropic Networks closed US$20 million in third round funding to support is metro DWDM solutions. The company has recently streamlined its business strategy to focus on the metro optical market. Five existing investment firms participated in the company's third round of financing -- Celtic House Venture Partners (lead investor), Goldman Sachs' Private Equity Group, Kodiak Venture Partners, Crescendo Ventures and the Teachers' Merchant Bank, the private equity arm of the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan.


  • Tropic's TRX-24000 platform, which was introduced in October 2002, takes ITU grid wavelengths from an existing SONET/SDH ADM, switch or router and transports it across multiple rings while staying in the optical domain. The platform has a range of 600 km. Tropic also features a Wavelength Tracker technology that monitors and provides failure detection functionality to manage the signal as it travels throughout the network.

Spirent and Sheer Networks Collaborate on Network Management Solutions

Spirent Communications and Sheer Networks announced a strategic agreement under which the companies will deliver an integrated solution for managing ATM, DSL and IP-VPN services. The solution will combine Sheer's BOS (Broadband Operating Supervisor) with Spirent's Perform operations support system (OSS) for performance management. Sheer's BOS (Broadband Operating Supervisor) manages communication between network elements and enables service providers to activate new services, detect faults, and reconcile inventories. Spirent's Perform reaches across multi-service and multi-vendor networks, and automates the critical functions that detect, isolate and remediate issues such as alarms and service level maintenance that arise within those networks.
http://www.sheernetworks.com
http://www.spirentcom.com