Monday, January 1, 2007

Pacific Cables Damaged in Undersea Earthquake

An earthquake off the southern tip of Taiwan damaged several undersea cable networks, disrupting telecom and Internet traffic across Asia.



Cables damaged by the earthquake and its aftershocks included:

  • the SMW3 cable, S1.8 (Fangshan - BU4) and S1.7 (BU3 - BU4)


  • the China-US cable, including segment W1 (Shantou - ChongMing) & segment S1 (Shantou - Okinawa/SLO), and segment W2 (spur to Fangshan).


  • the APCN cable, system 1 segment B17 (Hong Kong branch)


  • the APCN2 cable, system 2 Segment B5 (Taiwan Branch), segment 7 (Tanshui - Shantou) & segment 3 (Hong Kong - ChongMing)


  • the FLAG FEA cable, including sub-system 8 (Hong Kong - Shanghai - Korea)


  • the RNAL cable, including the Hong Kong - Busan cable, and the Hong Kong - Toucheng segment.


On January 2, Hong Kong's Office of the Telecommunications Authority (OFTA) said major ISPs had recovered about 80% of their international connection capacity. Some real-time applications such as IP telephony may continue to be adversely affected by excessive response times. Major repairs are now expected to be completed in late January or February.

http://www.cht.com.twhttp://www.smw3.com/

NTT's Photonic Crystals Delay Light

Researchers at NTT have developed a "photonic crystal" capable of trapping light for over one nanosecond within a wavelength-sized micro-cavity. The technique makes it possible to reduce the speed of light down to one 50 thousandth of that in air. The development was announced in the December 22 edition of "Nature Photonics" magazine.

NTT said the advancement opens up various possibilities for photonics such as a large-scale photonic information processing chip with extremely low power consumption power, or perhaps an optical quantum information processor operating with single photons.

http://www.ntt.co.jp/news/news06e/0612/061221a.html

BT Reaches Ten Million Broadband User Milestone

BT has reached the ten million broadband user milestone, smashing its initial target of five million connections by the end of 2006. That target was set in April 2002 when there were fewer than 150,000 DSL connections.



The ten million wholesale connections are shared between BT Wholesale and Openreach. BT Wholesale supplies services to more than 8.7 million customers (via service providers including BT Retail) whilst Openreach supplies more than 1.3 million lines to customers via local loop unbundlers.



Ben Verwaayen, Chief Executive of BT Group, said: "2007 is beginning with broadband firmly established at the heart of the UK economy, helping businesses to compete and enriching people's lives. The UK now has over 200 service providers making it the most competitive broadband market in the world. That means fantastic choice and value for consumers, and a constant stream of new and innovative applications."http://www.btplc.com

Intellon Cites Growth in HomePlug Deployments

Twelve service providers in Europe and Asia are now using Intellon's HomePlug ICs for in-home IPTV distribution. These include: 1&1, ChungHwa Telecom, Club Internet, France Telecom, Free, Hanaro Telecom, neuf cegetel, PCCW, Simmin, Tele2, Telecom Italia France and TPSA.



HomePlug technology uses the electrical wiring in customers' homes as an instant Ethernet network.



Intellon said its 85 Mbps HomePlug 1.0 with Turbo chipset has been very successful for service providers that need a customer-installable home backbone for distributing standard definition video. The company expects to see its IPTV business grow substantially during 2007, as additional operators adopt its Turbo solution for standard definition IPTV applications and new and existing customers begin to deploy its 200 Mbps HomePlug AV-based IC for high definition IPTV applications.

http://www.intellon.com

Alcatel-Lucent Closes Acquisition of Nortel's UMTS Radio Access Business

Alcatel-Lucent completed its acquisition of Nortel's UMTS radio access business on December 31 with a cash payment of US$320 million less significant deductions.



With this acquisition, Alcatel-Lucent said one in four UMTS operators - about 40 customers around the world - now use its UMTS solutions. http://www.alcatel-lucent.com
  • The deal, which was first announced on 01-Sept-2006, encompassed Nortel's UMTS access product portfolio made up of the Radio Network Controller and Node B products and OAM solutions, related services and associated assets. The deal added an additional fourteen UMTS customers to the Alcatel customer list. Alcatel said the acquisition would also significantly strengthened its research and development capabilities, especially in HSxPA and 3G Long-Term Evolution (3G LTE), fully leveraging Alcatel's expertise in multi-standard radio solutions and Software Defined Radio (SDR) technology.

Thursday, December 28, 2006

AT&T + BellSouth Deal Closes, Following Last Minute Concessions

The FCC voted 4-to-0 to approve AT&T's acquisition of BellSouth, concluding that the largest telecom merger in U.S. history would offer significant public benefits, including increased competition for video services and the creation of a stronger player in national communication services.





The merger was completed immediately following the vote.



"AT&T will be an engine for innovation, competition, and growth for our customers at home and abroad," said AT&T Chairman and CEO Edward E. Whitacre Jr. "In the Southeast, we will build on BellSouth's excellent record of serving customers and communities. And we are ready to lead the way in a new era of integrated wireless services nationwide."



The company said it will begin the integration process to converge the AT&T, BellSouth, and Cingular wireless and wireline IP networks, combine product portfolios and integrate customer care capabilities. AT&T will launch extensive new advertising, which will begin the transition of the BellSouth brand name to AT&T. AT&T will re-brand Cingular through a co-branded transition, which is scheduled to start in 2007.



The FCC decision, which came on the final business day of 2006, followed a series of last minute concessions from AT&T that ultimately swayed the two Democrat commissioners who had earlier withheld their approvals of the merger.



The list of new concessions includes:

  • For a period of 30 months, AT&T agrees to abide the principles of Net Neutrality set forth in the FCC policy statement of September 23, 2005.

  • AT&T commits that it will maintain a neutral network and neutral routing in its wireline broadband Internet access service. The company will not provide to any Internet content, application or service provider, including those affiliated with AT&T/BellSouth, any service that privileges, degrades or prioritizes any packet transmitted over its wireline broadband Internet access service based on its source, ownership or destination. The commitment applies from the network side of customer premise equipment (CPE) up to and including the closest Internet Exchange Point. AT&T said this commitment does not apply to its enterprise managed IP services nor to its IPTV service. The commitment will sunset two years from the merger closing date or the effective date of any future legislation on Net Neutrality enacted by Congress.


  • For three years, the company agrees to maintain at least as many settlement-free peering arrangements for Internet backbone services as it does today on the merger closing date.


  • By the end of 2007, AT&T will offer broadband (greater than 200 kbps in at least one direction) to 100% of residential living units in the AT&T/BellSouth in-region territory -- this includes at least 85% wireline coverage and the rest via broadband wireless technologies, such as WiMAX.


  • AT&T will offer DSL (up to 768 kbps) for $10 per month for up to 30 months to new customers who have never before subscribed to DSL.


  • AT&T promises to accelerate the rollout of its Uverse and HomeZone video services in BellSouth territory.


  • AT&T/BellSouth shall not seek any increase in state-approved rates for UNEs.


  • AT&T/BellSouth promises not increase the rates paid by existing customers of DS1 and DS3 private line services.


  • For a period of 30 months, the company will offer DSL without requiring customers to purchase a circuit switched voice line. The rate for this service will not exceed $19.95 (exclusive of regulatory fees and taxes).


  • The company will offer ADSL transmission service to other ISPs that is functionally equivalent to the same service AT&T offers in-region as of the date that the merger closes.


  • The company agrees to sell or transfer all of the 2.5 GHz wireless spectrum currently licensed or leased by BellSouth.


  • By 2010, the company agrees to offer service in the 2.3 GHz band to 25% of the population in the service area where it holds WCS licenses.


  • AT&T/BellSouth will repatriate 3,000 jobs that are currently outsourced by BellSouth abroad.


Following the vote, FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein, who pushed for the additional concessions from AT&T, commented "One hallmark of this Order is that it applies explicit, enforceable provisions to preserve and protect the open and interconnected nature of the Internet, including not only a commitment to abide by the four principles of the FCC Internet Policy Statement but also an historic agreement to ensure that the combined company will maintain a neutral network and neutral routing in its wireline broadband Internet access service."



In a separate statement, FCC Chairman Kevin Martin objected to many of the concessions, saying that while they may have helped close the merger, the concessions were unnecessary and ran counter to other FCC policies. "The conditions regarding net-neutrality have very little to do with the merger at hand and very well may cause greater problems than the speculative problems they seek to address. These conditions are simply not warranted by current market conditions and may deter facilities investment."http://www.att.comhttp;//www.bellsouth.com

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

BT Ready to Get Telecom Licenses in India

The Government of India, Department of Telecommunications (DoT), issued Letters of Intent (LoI) to BT for the award of licences for National Long Distance and International Long Distance services. Once the licences are fully operational, BT will be able to offer both domestic and international managed services to corporate customers who have sites in India. BT will also be able to provide these companies with VPN services using technologies such as ATM and MPLS.
http://www.btplc.com

Monday, December 25, 2006

Level 3 to Acquire SAVVIS CDN -- 7th Acquisition in 2006

Level 3 Communications agreed to acquire the Content Delivery Network (CDN) services business of SAVVIS, for $135 million in cash. The deal includes certain network elements, customer contracts, and intellectual property used in SAVVIS' CDN business.



SAVVIS' CDN services business, based in Thousand Oaks, California, with approximately 50 employees and over 100 customers, provides solutions that improve performance, reliability, scalability and reach of customers' online content. The business was initially launched in 1996 as Sandpiper Networks -- the world's first content delivery network. It has a globally distributed infrastructure in more than 20 countries.



SAVVIS' CDN business had approximately $15 million in revenue for the nine months ending September 30, 2006.



"The largest customers of CDN services rely on a combination of capabilities to support their businesses. These include services like CDN, IP transit, wavelengths, metro transport, and colocation. Upon completion of this transaction, Level 3 believes that it will be the only CDN services provider with a single source, full portfolio of end-to-end content distribution solutions, and will be in a unique position to offer a range of building blocks to meet these customers' needs," said Kevin O'Hara, president and chief operating officer of Level 3.

http://www.level3.comhttp://www.savvis.netIn October 2006, Level 3 Communications agreed to acquire Broadwing Corporation in a cash and stock deal valued at $1.4 billion. The deal adds to a series of acquisitions by Level 3 this year, including WilTel, Progress Telecom, ICG Communications, TelCove and Looking Glass Networks.

Friday, December 22, 2006

Microsoft, SOFTBANK and Japan Telecom Team on Services

Microsoft, SOFTBANK BB, and Japan Telecom are developing a security-enhanced, integrated communications service that combines VoIP, e-mail, Internet access, groupware, presence, instant messaging and desktop services with network infrastructure.



The companies have formed a strategic business alliance to provide this service as a business-oriented solution, beginning with trials in Spring 2006.



The service will link the Microsoft Solution for Enhanced VoIP Services with BB Phone's voice platform and JAPAN TELECOM's managed network infrastructure.



Microsoft Solution for Enhanced VoIP Services comprises hosted versions of Microsoft server products including Microsoft Exchange Server 2003, Microsoft Office Live Communications Server 2005 and Windows SharePoint Services with Sylantro Systems Corp.'s Application Feature Server.

http://www.microsoft.com

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Juniper Plans $900 Million in Charges for Past Stock-Compensation Probems

Juniper Networks announced that its internal Audit Committee has concluded that numerous stock option grants issued in the past differ from the recorded grant dates of such awards. Specifically, it was determined that there were numerous instances in which grant dates were chosen with the benefit of hindsight as to the price of the Company's stock, so as to give favorable prices. Blame was attributed to certain management members who are no longer with the company.



Therefore, Juniper currently anticipates that it will record additional non-cash charges for stock-based compensation expense of approximately $900 million, 99.9 percent of which relate to options granted between June 9, 1999 and December 31, 2003.



Juniper Networks noted that its CEO, Scott Kriens, received two stock option awards with measurement date issues. However, both options were canceled unexercised in 2001. Kriens has not exercised any stock options since 1998, approximately a year before the company's IPO.



Juniper's Board of Director expressed their continued confidence in Kriens.

http://www.juniper.net

AT&T Launches U-verse TV in SF Bay Area

AT&T announced the initial launch of its U-verse TV service in parts of the San Francisco Bay area, including parts of the cities of Cupertino and Saratoga, and parts of the cities of San Ramon and Danville. AT&T said it now expects to launch U-verse in eleven markets by the end of the year, with plans to launch in additional markets in early 2007.



AT&T U-verse is offering:

  • more than 300 channels, including digital music, local, and premium movie and sports programming.


  • a more than 25 High Definition (HD) channels-and high speed Internet access.


  • Web remote access to digital video recorder (DVR)


  • built-in picture-in-picture functionality that allows subscribers to "channel surf" on any television without leaving the program they're watching.


  • specially designed set top boxes, manufactured by Motorola, all of which are HD-capable and include universal remote controls that provide backlit buttons and one-touch access to video-on-demand, DVR, and other
    services.


  • a premium Spanish-language package


Three packages of AT&T Yahoo! High Speed Internet U-verse Enabled will be made available to AT&T U-verse customers:

  • Elite: Downstream up to 6.0 Mbps, upstream up to 1.0 Mbps.

  • Pro: Downstream up to 3.0 Mbps, upstream up to 1.0 Mbps.

  • Express: Downstream up to 1.5 Mbps, upstream up to 1.0 Mbps.
http://www.att.com

Seagate to Acquire EVault for Online Backup Service

Seagate Technology agreed to acquire privately-held EVault, which provides online backup services, as part of its effort to extend the company's storage solutions and strengthen its Seagate Services group. The all-cash deal was valued at approximately $185 million.



EVault was founded in 1997 and is based in Emeryville, California. The company has over 250 employees and claims more than 8,500 customers, including hundreds of financial, health care and legal organizations.



EVault is the most recent acquisition in the broader storage solutions area and the third for Seagate in the area of services. In 2005, Seagate purchased Mirra, which developed a networked digital content protection server for the home and small business markets; and Action Front, a professional in-lab data recovery company.



Seagate said that with its Services group it is interested in pursuing underserved markets where it can leverage leading technology and market expertise, and provide unique value propositions to address growing customer needs.

http://www.seagate.comhttp://www.evault.com

Motorola To Acquire Tut Systems for $39 Million

Motorola agreed to acquire Tut Systems for $1.15 per share in cash, giving the transaction a value of approximately $39 million on a fully-diluted basis.



Tut Systems provides carrier-class end-to-end digital video encoding, processing and distribution products. Their solutions support MPEG-2 and MPEG- 4 AVC video compression, local ad insertion, forward error correction, and real-time conditioning of video and audio. Tut Systems' customer list includes more than 160 service providers worldwide.



Tut Systems' "Astria" content processor (CP)is an IPTV headend solution supporting various access networks, including ADSL, VDSL, fiber to the home (FTTH) and hybrid-fiber coax (HFC), all within a single chassis. Protocol support includes ATM, pure-IP, IP over ATM and native MTS. Astria CPs support physical interface requirements including Gig-E, OC-3, DVB-ASI.



Motorola said it plans to integrate Tut Systems' solutions with its own digital video delivery solutions for supporting advanced video services over IP, ATM, or RF-based network architectures. Motorola currently has deployed 2060 digital video networks and over 50 million digital video set tops worldwide.



Once the deal closes, Tut Systems will become a wholly-owned subsidiary of Motorola and will be integrated into the Motorola Connected Home Solutions business. Motorola intends to maintain Tut Systems' operations in Lake Oswego, Oregon, San Diego California and Pleasanton California.

http://www.motorola.comhttp://www.tutsys.com

UTStarcom's CTO Resigns to Take Post at China Mobile

UTStarcom announced the resignation of Executive Vice President and Chief Technology Officer Bill Huang, who will take a senior executive position at China Mobile Ltd. On an interim basis, Pat Chan, senior vice president of UTStarcom's Network Solutions business unit, will assume Huang's responsibilities as acting chief technology officer.

http://www.utstar.com

DIRECTV Awards Data Networking Contract Extension to AT&T

DIRECTV will continue its current contract with AT&T for OneNet services for an additional year at a value of $33 million. AT&T will continue to provide DIRECTV with toll-free 800, Advanced Features and ATM and Frame Relay services that support 18 call centers and approximately 60 corporate WAN points of presence. AT&T will also begin to provide MPLS connectivity for supporting DIRECTV's corporate VoIP traffic.

http://www.att.comhttp://www.directv.com

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

FCC Votes 3-2 to Ease Video Franchising Process

The FCC voted 3-to-2 to approve new rules that prohibit local franchising authorities from unreasonably refusing to award competitive franchises for the provision of cable services. The vote is a victory for A&T, Verizon and other telephone providers seeking to enter the market for video services.



The majority of FCC commissioners concluded that the current franchising process required by local municipalities constitutes an unreasonable barrier to entry that impedes the achievement of the interrelated federal goals of enhanced cable competition and accelerated broadband deployment.



The new rules would prohibit towns or cities from engaging new market entrants in drawn-out local negotiations with no time limits; unreasonable build-out requirements; unreasonable requests for "in-kind" payments that attempt to subvert the five percent cap on franchise fees; and unreasonable demands with respect to public, educational and government access.



FCC Chairman Kevin J. Martin wrote "Telephone companies are investing billions of dollars to upgrade their networks to provide video. As new providers began actively seeking entry into video markets, we began to hear that some local authorities were making the process of getting franchises unreasonably difficult, despite clear statutory language. The record collected by the Commission in this proceeding cited instances where LFAs sat on applications for more than a year or required extraordinary in kind contributions such as the building of public swimming pools and recreation centers. Such unreasonable requirements are especially troubling because competition is desperately needed in the video market."



In a statement, FCC Commissioner Michael J. Copps, who voted against the measure, wrote: "I have been troubled at the lack of a granular record that would demonstrate that the present franchising system is irretrievably broken and that traditional federal-state-local relationships have to be so thoroughly upended." He also noted that the ruling might exceed the FCC's mandate and therefore draw legal challenges which would further delay network rollouts.

http://www.fcc.gov

Siemens Achieves 107 Gbps over a Single Fiber Channel

Researchers at Siemens, working in cooperation with Micram, the Fraunhofer Institute for Telecommunications (Heinrich-Hertz-Institut) and Eindhoven Technical University, achieved an optical transmission rate of 107 Gbps over a single fiber channel using purely electric processing in both the transmitter and receiver.



The newly developed transmission and receiving system processes the data by purely electrical means directly before and after its conversion into optical signals. The test was conducted at a long-haul network at one of world's largest optical network operators, in which Siemens has previously deployed a 40 Gbps network for commercial use.



A few months earlier, Siemens researchers already proved the feasibility of a receiver with 100% electrical processing for optical transmission at 107 Gbps in which the signal from the photo diode is picked up and processed directly by a chip. The optical transmitter has been "fully electrified."



"In the spring of 2006 we demonstrated the system with a fully electric receiver," said Dr. Rainer H. Derksen, project coordinator at Siemens Corporate Technology in Munich. "At that time we were still using optical multiplexing in the transmitter. Now we've designed a complete system with 100% electrical processing of the data in both the receiver and the transmitter."



Siemens said the first commercial products based on the prototype will be available on the market within a few years. The company expects the technology will find deployments in 100 Gbps Ethernet systems.

http://www.siemens.com

Boingo Expands Roaming Network in Europe

Boingo Wireless expanding its roaming network with the addition of six Wi-Fi partners in Europe, providing new Boingo hot spots in Germany, Spain, Greece and the Netherlands. Boingo now provides over 60,000 locations from more than 140 leading Wi-Fi operators.



Boingo also announced an expanded partnership with The Cloud, Europe's leading neutral-host Wi-Fi network operator, to enable Boingo's retail customers, and customers of Fiberlink and Verizon Business Access, to access all European locations of The Cloud. The previous deal with The Cloud only covered the UK.



Working with GANAG (GlobalAirNet AG), Germany, Boingo now has enhanced wireless coverage at Germany's Munich International Airport. Also in Germany, Boingo partnered with HotspotDeutschland, a wireless Internet service provider (WISP) with 350 hot spots, and added Travelping, another German-based ISP with 150 hotspots in Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom. Boingo extended its reach in Spain by partnering with AWA, a WISP operating 600 hotspots in retail locations, cafes, marinas, restaurants and hotels including all Repsol gas stations across the country. Spain's largest Wi-Fi operator, AWA has contracts to deploy 4,000 more hot spots. In the Netherlands and the Netherlands Antilles, Boingo teamed with Mobilander. Customers are offered access at 40 hotspots in hotels, restaurants and libraries in 6 main university cities in the Netherlands, and at 100 UTS/Mobilander-hotspots in hotels, resorts and restaurants on Curacao and St. Martin. Boingo also buoyed its coverage in the Mediterranean region, adding FORTHnet, the largest network of wireless access spots in Greece, with more than 72 hot spots at hotels, cruise lines and 34 Starbucks locationhttp://www.boingo.com

Motorola Cites Mobile WiMAX Momentum in 2006

With the prediction that 2007 will be the year WiMAX will begin entering the mainstream, Motorola issued a year-end update on its wi4 WiMAX solutions. The company cited several milestones during 2006. These include:

  • Announced agreements with Sprint Nextel and Clearwire in the US, Wateen Telecom in Pakistan and Agni Systems, Ltd in Bangladesh for WiMAX systems. Clearwire and Sprint Nextel are the two largest holders of 2.5GHz spectrum in the U.S.


  • Increased to more than 20 the number of 802.16e mobile WiMAX trials underway around the world.


  • Began work on the build out of the new 3.5GHz nationwide wireless
    broadband voice and data network for Wateen Telecom, part of Warid Telecom International. Phase 1 rollout, covering major cities in Pakistan, is near completion and recently end-to-end voice and data
    services were successfully tested on the Wateen Telecom WiMAX/IMS network.


  • Announced its WiMAX chipset design effort, launched its first and second generation WiMAX access points, unveiled its CPE portfolio, and demonstrated interoperability with PC cards using third-party chipsets as well as mobile WiMAX handoffs using its WAP400 series access points.


  • For 2007, Motorola expects general availability of its portfolio of WiMAX access points, PC cards and customer premises equipment; live, commercial networks with customers; and previews of handheld devices.


"When we look back one year ago and reflect on all that the industry has accomplished, it is truly astounding the pace at which next generation broadband solutions are evolving. WiMAX no longer is just a promise, a potential. Now it's here, it's real, and Motorola is at the forefront of delivering this technology," said Dan Coombes, senior vice president and chief technology officer, Motorola Networks & Enterprise.

http://www.motorola.com

BigBand's DOCSIS 3.0 CMTS Enters Trials with European Operators

BigBand Networks' modular cable modem termination system (M-CMTS), which supports DOCSIS 3.0 downstream channel bonding, has entered trials with multiple European cable operators, including Multikabel in the Netherlands and Austria's LiWest Kabelmedien GmbH. BigBand has also provided its M-CMTS platform to operators in North America and Asia as part of an early access program (EAP). Key advantages include quadrupled downstream delivery capacity and convergence of video, data and voice traffic.



DOCSIS 3.0 specifications, developed by CableLabs and EURCableLabs, provide various tools to enhance network functionality, including significantly increasing capacity for IP-based traffic.



BigBand said that unlike traditional CMTS platforms that integrate capabilities on one chassis, a modular CMTS separates functionality onto two platforms. The BigBand Cuda12000 CMTS performs DOCSIS protocol processing on IP packets destined for subscribers. The second platform, the BigBand BEQ6000, delivers these packets to subscribers using RF quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) signaling. Disaggregation of CMTS functionality is designed to open the door to more economical realization of higher broadband speeds and increasing bandwidth flexibility.



"We believe we have a time-to-market lead in M-CMTS, and we're hoping to extend this advantage to our customers and allow them to benefit from downstream capacity increases, with a cost-effective migration path to DOCSIS 3.0," said John Connelly, executive vice president of marketing and business development at BigBand Networks.

http://www.bigbandnet.com/