Thursday, November 6, 2003

ITU Approves 40 Gbps Standard

The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) approved a standard for 40 Gbps optical transmission. The standard -- ITU-T Recommendation G.959.1 -- increases the capacity for optical interfaces from the present maximum of 10 Gbps to 40 Gbps. The new standard targets two un-amplified link distances: the first is for lengths up to 40 km and the second for up to 80 km. Such interfaces would use a C-band wavelength of 1535-1565 nm and single mode optical fiber, as specified in ITU-T G.652, G.653 and G.655. The standard uses Forward Error Correction (FEC) techniques and adaptive chromatic dispersion compensators.


Peter Wery, Chairman of the ITU-T group responsible for the standard, said that historically "each fourfold increase in data speed has multiplied costs by just two and half times, leading to lower cost per bit. If this historical precedent holds true, 40 Gbps technology will reduce systems equipment costs by up to 40%."http://www.itu.int/newsroom/press_releases/2003/29.html
  • In July 2003, Deutsche Telekom began testing a purely optical transmission network operating at rates up to 40 Gbps.

Intel Acquires Mobilian for Wireless Designs

Intel acquired the assets of Mobilian, a start-up developing silicon for wireless networking, for an undisclosed sum. The company was working on designs that enable seamless roaming between WPAN, WLAN, and WWAN networks. Mobilian's first "True Radio" product was aimed at bridging Bluetooth and Wi-Fi networks. The company had operations in San Diego Hillsboro (Oregon) and Yokneam, Israel. Mobilian was founded in February 1999 and raised some $70 million in funding.
http://www.intel.com
http://www.mobilian.com

Marvell Purchases Buildings and Land in Silicon Valley

Marvell has acquired six buildings on 33.8 acres of land in Santa Clara, California for $63.9 million. The site is located at 5400 Bayfront Plaza, Santa Clara, California .
http://www.marvell.com

Cable & Wireless and Akamai Settle CDN Patent Dispute

Cable & Wireless America and Akamai Technologies, Inc. (Nasdaq: AKAM) over the patent disputes relating to the two companies' content delivery network (CDN) services. Under the agreement, the two companies have agreed to dismiss the two lawsuits recently filed by Akamai against Cable & Wireless and the pending lawsuits filed by Cable & Wireless against Akamai, release each company from all previous patent infringements, and refrain for five years from further patent litigation under their present patent portfolios and related patents. As part of the agreement, no cash payments or compensation will be made and each party may continue to offer its CDN services. Akamai will be permitted to pursue its damages claims resulting from the litigation relating to a specific patent (U.S. Patent No. 6,108,703).
http://www.cw.com
http://www.akamai.com

Wednesday, November 5, 2003

Adelphia Selects Internet Photonics for VOD

Adelphia Communications is deploying Internet Photonics' LightStack platforms to support video-on-demand (VOD) services. The network uses Internet Photonics' LightStack GSLAM to aggregate GbE streams from a bank of centralized VOD servers in the headend onto a 10G wavelength for transport across the network. In the hubs on the other end, a LightStack MX separates the GbE streams and sends them to the edge QAMs for delivery to the customer.


Adelphia will begin offering its VOD service by the end of November to digital cable customers in select locations in Southern California. Most of Adelphia's remaining Los Angeles service areas will introduce VOD over the next 12 months.
http://www.internetphotonics.com
  • In March 2003, Internet Photonics introduced a new LightStack Gigabit Services Line Access Multiplexer (GSLAM) designed to aggregate, switch and multiplex multiple services (including managed services) in major cable headends or service provider POPs. The new GLSAM platform, which complements existing LightStack products for remote hub sites or premises, scales to handle 64 Gigabit Ethernet connections. The platform uses Internet Photonics' “SONET WrapAround�? capability in order to preserve existing traffic on a ring without interrupting the service. Optical Ethernet services are inserted onto the fiber using different wavelengths so as not to disrupt the existing traffic. The LightStack also features a VirtualWire capability by which eight GbE services, each with its own circuit-like sub-channel, are multiplexed onto a single 10 Gbps wavelength.

Marconi Ships Metro 16-64 Platform

Marconi announced the general availability of its optical multiservice, metro 16-64 platform, which is designed to serve as both a high-density service delivery platform as well as a compact, high-capacity traffic aggregation and switching device. The platform combines multiple line rate, Ethernet transport/switching and scalable, fully non-blocking cross-connect capability. The Marconi multiservice metro 16-64 leverages a dual data and TDM bus architecture that supports Generic Framing Procedure (GFP), Link Capacity Adjustment Scheme (LCAS) and Virtual Concatenation (VCAT) solutions. Multiple traffic types are supported from STM-1 through STM-64, PDH interfaces at 1.5 Mbps, 2 Mbps, 34 Mbps, 45 Mbps, as well as support for 10/100 Mbps and GigE Ethernet services with L2 switching.
http://www.marconi.com

Alcatel Supplies DSL Network for Macedonia

Makedonski Telekomunkacii, a subsidiary of the Hungarian Matav Group, selected the Alcatel 7300 Advanced Services Access Manager (ASAM) with the IP Services Module (ISM) for its DSL network in Macedonia. Financial terms were not disclosed.
http://www.alcatel.com

BroadLight Releases FTTP Transceiver -- 622/155 Mbps

BroadLight introduced a three wavelength burst mode ONT transceiver with an embedded analog video receiver that supports 622 Mbps on the downstream and 155 Mbps on the upstream. The new device , which complies with ITU-T G.983.3 and meets the requirements set by the FTTP RFP, completes the offering of BroadLight that includes burst mode transceivers, PON controllers and software stacks for both Central Office (CO) and Customer Premises Equipment (CPE).


BroadLight is currently shipping the device to systems vendors involved in FTTP projects. The company said it is ramping up production to fulfill large quantity orders.
http://www.broadlight.com

Hurricane Electric Expands in London

Hurricane Electric, a colocation provider based in Fremont, California, has expanded to London. Hurricane Electric is connected to Telehouse London with an OC48, which connects the UK to the rest of Hurricane Electric's global OC48 backbone. The Hurricane Electric facility employs two Gigabit Ethernet ports to the LINX exchange.
http://www.he.net

The Home Multimedia Experience: Content Anywhere, Anytime

Consumers want electronic devices that work together and share content seamlessly, said Bob Gregory, Director of Initiatives Planning, Desktop Platforms Group at Intel, speaking at Parks Associates' Home Multimedia Experience event in San Jose. Today, technology in the home is isolated in islands. The PC is in the den, stereo equipment and the TV is in the family room. Products are only just starting to bridge the gaps and Intel is betting that there is a great opportunity in home networking. Intel envisions an ecosystem of solutions and choices from a variety of companies. Gregory said that vendor specific solutions are unwise and will stall development of the market. Gregory predicts four waves of innovation:

  • Digital devices and content (cameras, mp3 players)

  • Content on extended home networks (music to stereo, photos to TV)

  • Broadband broadcast content (premium content and services)

  • Interoperable networks (to any home device, with multiple media streams)


However, Gregory conceded that for the home networking market to really take-off, much more work needs to be done. Today's home networks are still difficult to set up and operate. System vendors should assume that consumers will return networking products if they do not work when they are plugged in. Networking systems will be used in a myriad of home environments, and must work in them all, which will require more design and testing work. In addition, typical consumers still don't have a good sense of what can be done in a home multimedia network. The industry needs to educate consumers about what is possible, which will help the adoption of home multimedia networks.
http://www.convergedigest.com

Airspan to Acquire Nortel Networks' Fixed Wireless Access Business

Airspan Networks agreed to acquire Nortel Networks Fixed Wireless Access business for approximately $12.9 million in cash. The deal includes a number of customer prepaid deposits (which at closing are expected to exceed $11 million), and Airspan will assume the obligation to supply these prepaid orders. Airspan expects the transaction to have an immediate positive earnings and cash impact, and to add substantially to Airspan's revenues going forward.


The Nortel Networks Fixed Wireless Access business is a supplier of fixed wireless access using 3.5 GHz spectrum. The products are sold under the Proximity brand name. Installations have included a major deployment in Mexico, described as one of the largest single 3.5GHz fixed wireless access networks in the world. Since Proximity was first deployed in 1996, Nortel Networks has installed almost 500,000 million lines with 15 operators in 14 countrieshttp://www.airspan.com

Speedera to Support CDN for Softbank's "BB Cable TV" in Japan

Speedera Networks announced a partnership with Club iT Corporation and its parent company, Softbank Broadmedia Corporation, to provide content and application delivery services for the broadband market in Japan. Club iT has already been focusing on broadband content distribution through "BB Cable TV," operated by BB Cable Corporation, a fully owned subsidiary of Softbank Broadmedia. Speedera will help improve the network infrastructure for broadband content delivery. Club iT will provide sales and marketing for the service, under the brand name "Broadmedia CDN." Multiple enterprises have already agreed to evaluate the BroadmediaCDN service, including Yahoo! Japan, SOFTBANK ZDNet, and E*TRADE Securities Co.
http://www.speedera.com

Terayon Announces Secondary Common Stock Offering

Terayon Communication Systems intends to offer a number of shares of its common stock that will result in gross proceeds of $75.0 million.
http://www.terayon.com
  • Last week, Terayon reported Q3 revenue of $37.6 million, an increase of 54% compared to $24.5 million for Q3 2002, and an increase of 23% from $30.6 million for Q2 2003.

IBM and NTT Com Partner on Enterprise Hosting

IBM Japan and NTT Communications announced an alliance to provide enterprise resource planning (ERP) solutions for mid-sized businesses in Japan. The service will combine IBM Japan's ERP solutions for medium-sized businesses with NTT Com's NTT/VERIO PowerPlatform Hosting Services.
http://www.ntt.com/NEWS_RELEASE_E/news03/0011/1106.html

Korea's Dacom Selects Nortel Networks for VoIP

Dacom, a leading Korean service provider, will base its next generation voice network on Nortel Networks Succession Communication Server (CS) 2000-Compact superclass softswitch and Multimedia Communication Server (MCS) 5200. The Dacom contract was awarded to Nortel Networks through its Korea channel distributor, ITIAN Corporation. Financial terms were not disclosed. Nortel Networks has previously supplied Dacom with an advanced ring-topology optical fiber SONET backbone as well as a DWDM optical metro network.


The Succession CS 2000 is a superclass softswitch that provides circuit-to-packet migration, including local, tandem and long distance capability. It provides business and residential telephony service sets, and supports regulatory features such as lawful intercept and number portability. Nortel Networks MCS 5200 is a carrier-grade, SIP-based media and applications server.
http://www.nortelnetworks.com

ECI Reports Q3 Revenue of $105 Million, an Increase over Q2

ECI Telecom reported Q3 revenue of $105 million, compared to $102 million in Q2 2003 and $147 million in Q3 2002. Gross profit increased to $40.0 million (38.3% of revenues) compared to gross profit of $37.3 million (36.7% of revenues) in Q2 and $52.4 million (35.6%) in Q3 2002. The operating loss for Q3 2003 was $19.1 million compared to $34.3 million in Q2 and an operating loss of $42.0 million in Q3 2002. The net loss for the third quarter of 2003 was $14.7 million, or $0.14 per share.


Revenues of the Optical Networks Division increased 19% sequentially to $47.0 million from $39.6 million in Q2 2003 and compared to $57.5 million in Q3 of last year. The Broadband Access Division recorded revenues of $40.3 million compared to $44.6 million in Q2 of 2003 and $49.6 million in Q3 of 2002.


Doron Inbar, ECI's President and CEO said, "After a period of essentially declining revenues, we are pleased to record a sequential increase in quarterly revenues... At this point, we feel that the restructuring efforts of the last few years are essentially behind us....The market remains challenging but we are encouraged by the sequential growth in revenues, our improved gross margins and reduced net loss. "http://www.ecitele.com

Tellabs Reports Strong Initial Sales for its Tellabs 6350 Switch Node

The Tellabs 6350 switch node platform, which was introduced ten months ago, has become the fastest-selling new product in the company's history. Shipments of the digital crossconnect platform has exceeded 250 nodes so far. Customers for the Tellabs 6350 switch node include PGCIL in India, Tele2 in Sweden, Telenor in Norway, Nextel de Mexico S.A. de C.V. in Mexico and Sonofon in Denmark.


The Tellabs 6350 switch node is a scalable, high-density multiservice platform that handles voice traffic, higher speed leased line services and data services, including high-speed Ethernet. It has 138 Gbps of switch capacity and interfaces for direct integration with Ethernet, SDH and DWDM networks. When deployed in distributed network architectures, the Tellabs 6350 switch node provides efficient grooming with reduced back-hauling of network traffic, which leads to better network economics.
http://www.tellabs.com

FCC to Open IP Telephony Proceedings on December 1

The FCC will hold a forum on Voice over IP issues on 01-December-2003 and shortly thereafter intends to initiate a Notice of Public Rule Making (NPRM) to inquire about the migration of voice services to IP-based networks.


The December hearing will invite industry and government leaders to discuss how digital technologies are being used to provide innovative and affordable voice services to consumers and stimulate economic growth. It will also explore regulatory classification issues and explore the best means to achieve important health, safety and welfare policy objectives such as E911, universal service and homeland security.


In a letter to Senator Wyden published on the FCC homepage, Michael Powell expressed his excitement about the potential of VoIP to revolutionize the way services are delivered to consumers and businesses. Powell noted that "the creative forces that have fueled the Internet growth for the last decade are doing the very thing government regulators have tried to accomplish since the 1996 Telecommunications Act -- bring competitive, cheaper and more innovative voice services to the public." As the U.S. Senate debates the issue of Internet Tax Moratoriums, Powell urged caution regarding the taxation of VoIP services -- "imposing regulatory burdens on the new and emerging Internet services, before the FCC fully engages the public and develops a comprehensive record, may have the unintended consequence of stifling its growth and denying the public benefits of that growth."http://www.fcc.gov

Sprint to Deploy Wi-Fi at Truckstops Nationwide

Sprint announced a multimillion-dollar agreement with Truckstop.net to deploy Wi-Fi hotspots at truck stops and highway travel plazas across the U.S. Truckstop.net intends to bring the service to about 300 new locations every quarter. The first 25 sites are already active. The companies said there are more than 4.5 million truckers on the road in North America and 25% have laptops.
http://www.sprint.com/truckstophttp://www.truckstop.net

MPLS/Frame Relay Alliance Service Provider Committee Sets Goals

The MPLS/Frame Relay Alliance's newly-created Service Provider Committee (SPC) met for the first time at the Alliance's recent quarterly meeting in London. The committee's mission is to guide the Alliance's Technical Committee's work plan from a carrier perspective.


The MPLS/Frame Relay Alliance is organizing an interoperability testing event that will occur at the MPLS World Congress in Paris in February 2004 and will focus on QoS elements of MPLS technology. A second interoperability demonstration will take place in Kobe, Japan, at the International Conference on Communication and Broadband Networking 2004 (ICBN'04) in April.
http://www.mplsforum.org/