Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Intel Unveils Open Hardware Platforms for SDN and NFV

Intel introduced three platforms for software defined networking (SDN) and network function virtualization (NFV).

The product launch includes:

The Intel Open Network Platform Switch Reference Design, previously codenamed "Seacliff Trail," is based on scalable Intel processors, Intel Ethernet Switch 6700 series and the Intel Communications Chipset 89xx series.  It will include Wind River Open Network Software (ONS), an open and fully customizable network switching software stack using Wind River Linux. Wind River ONS allows for key networking capabilities such as advanced tunneling as well as modular, open control plane and management interface supporting SDN standards such as OpenFlow and Open vSwitch. Common, open programming interfaces allow for automated network management, and coordination between the server switching elements and network switches enabling more cost-effective, secure, efficient and extensible services.
 
The Intel Data Plane Development Kit Accelerated Open vSwitch  -- a project aimed at improving small packet throughput and workload performance that can be achieved on the Open vSwitch.  Intel is specifically re-creating the kernel forwarding module (data plane) to take advantage of the Intel DPDK library. The Intel DPDK Accelerated Open vSwitch is planned to initially be released with the Intel® ONP Server Reference Design in the third quarter of this year.
 
The Intel Open Network Platform Server Reference Design, previously codenamed "Sunrise Trail," is based on the Intel Xeon processor, Intel 82599 Ethernet Controller and Intel Communications Chipset 89xx series. The ONP Server Reference Design enables virtual appliance workloads on standard Intel architecture servers using SDN and NFV open standards for datacenter and telecom. Wind River Open Network Software includes an Intel DPDK Accelerated Open vSwitch, fast packet acceleration and deep packet inspection capabilities, as well as support for open SDN standards such as OpenFlow, Open vSwitch and OpenStack. The project is in development now: the first alpha series is slated to be available in the second half of this year.

"SDN and NFV are critical elements of Intel's vision to transform the expensive, complex networks of today to a virtualized, programmable, standards-based architecture running commercial off-the-shelf hardware," said Rose Schooler, vice president of Intel Architecture Group and general manager of Intel's Communications and Storage Infrastructure Group. "The reference designs announced today enable a new phase in the evolution of the network and represent Intel's commitment to driving an open environment that fosters business agility and smart economics."

In a keynote address at the Open Networking Summit conference in Silicon Valley, Schooler cited a number of companies planning to build products based on these platforms, including Big Switch, HP, NEC, NTT Data, Quanta, Super Micro, VMware and Vyatta (a Brocade company). 

Some other points:

  • Intel is working with NEC and Telefonica to develop a network virtualization of the Evolved Packet Core.  The design puts MME and S/P GW functions on an ATCA Chassis.
  • VMware is working with Intel on a network virtualization solution for software defined data centers (SDDC).
  • Intel is using SDN concepts in its own data centers.
  • Intel is working with HP and Verizon to test a cross-country, cloud bursting between distant data centers.  The trial involves an Intel private cloud in Portland, OR, and HP Lab in Plano, TX, and a Verizon Public Cloud lab in Waltham, MA.


 

Huawei Develops SDN-based Mobile Backhaul

At the Open Networking Summit in Santa Clara, California, Huawei introduced an SDN-based mobile backhaul solution based on its CX600 series aggregation router, ATN910 series cell site router (CSR), and U2000 Network Management System (NMS).

The solution is the outcome of a joint innovation project between Huawei and the China Telecom Guangzhou Institute. The newly added SDN features include the capability to support a massive number of cell site routers (ATN910 series) managed as a virtual cluster by centralized SDN controllers embedded in the aggregation routers (CX600 series). The SDN controller provides a centralized control plane for the cell site routers, performing centralized path calculation, service provisioning, and traffic control. The addition of the U2000 system provides a graphical user interfaced (GUI) based unified NMS for the cell site and aggregation routers. Based on these products, the SDN-based Mobile Backhaul solution effectively provides plug-and-play, auto service provisioning, smart traffic steering, and auto trouble shooting capabilities for a large number of cell site routers. Early tests have shown promising results with service provisioning efficiency improvements of 85% and over 50% reduction in network alarms.

"Huawei is committed to helping our customers achieve business success through innovative technology solutions. Our progress with SDN technology demonstrates Huawei’s practical and effective leadership within the Carrier SDN industry." said Mr. Gai Gang, President of Huawei Carrier IP product line.

In a presentation at the ONS conference, Justin Dustzadeh, CTO & VP Technology Strategy for Huawei, said that SDN is about accelerating the pace of innovation. Some other highlights:


  • Huawei has developed a Virtual Residential Gateway in an OLT.  This SDN use-case was developed in partnership with Telefonica, which is currently testing in Spain.
  • Another SDN use case involves Cloud Data Center Interconnection.  Huawei is developing this capability with China Unicom, which operates nearly 200 data centers.
  • Huawei's newly announced Protocol-Oblivious Forwarding aims to achieve data path programmability with generic network instructions and open interfaces.

http://www.huawei.com


Nuage and Red Hat Partner on OpenStack Quantum Plug-in

Nuage Networks and Red Hat are collaborating to certify an OpenStack Quantum plug-in for Red Hat’s planned enterprise cloud management solution, Red Hat OpenStack.

Quantum is an OpenStack project to provide “networking as a service” between interface devices managed by other Openstack services.

http://www.nuagenetworks.net/


Video: Where is SDN Today?



Click here to see video:  http://youtu.be/cbnm1iraM_c

Industry leaders share their views on where Software Defined Networking stands in the market today.  Is it still just hype or have real use cases emerged? What are the prospects for SDN in the coming year?  Is it truly transformative?  Speakers were asked to keep their responses to about a minute.

0:10 - Open Networking Foundation's Dan Pitt

0:51 - Juniper Networks' Mike Marcellin

2:04 - Cisco's Colin Kincaid

3:05 - Brocade's Dave Meyer

3:46 - Infinera's Mike Capuano

4:46 - Dell Networking's Arput Joshipura

5:37 - Nuage Networks' Sunil Khandekar

6:45 - ONS and Stanford's Guru Parulkar

7:44 - Big Switch's Guido Appenzeller

ONF Outlines Technical Roadmap for OpenFlow

The Open Networking Foundation (ONF) outlined its technical roadmap to drive the commercialization of open, standards-based SDN.

The ONF said its emphasis in the coming year will be on "building the OpenFlow substrate to meet market needs, including standard approaches to configuration, management, security, and transport. In addition to providing the foundation on which SDN value is built, the OpenFlow substrate supports the virtualization of many network functions. Thus ONF will continue to work closely with the ETSI network-operator-led Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) Industry Specification Group (ISG).

Key elements of the 2013 roadmap include:


  • Evolution of the OpenFlow protocol to version 1.4
  • Prototyping of new features before they are built into standards documentation to ensure that they meet end-user needs
  • Certifying products built on OpenFlow 1.0 through OpenFlow 1.3 through a formal certification program; sanctioning independent labs for testing
  • Embarking on Operations, Administration and Maintenance (OAM)
  • Fostering a supply chain for physical OpenFlow switches by developing table typing patterns in the Forwarding Abstractions Working Group and convening a chipmaker advisory board that will encourage OpenFlow support in Ethernet chips
  • Introducing the Migration Working Group to make recommendations on guidelines, systems, tools, and metrics for migrating to an OpenFlow network.
  • Introducing the Optical Transport Working Group, a group driven by telecommunications providers and focused on optical WANs and the interconnection between services that network operators offer and cloud companies provide with an emphasis on quality of service (QoS).
  • Adding nine new thought leaders to the Research Associates roster, bring the total to twelve. Research Associates are selected for participation privileges in ONF based on their contributions to the creation and advancement of SDN and the OpenFlow protocol. 

The ONF has appointed Rick Bauer to the position of technical program manager to oversee the technical roadmap.

“Rapid SDN adoption requires practical solutions,” said Dan Pitt, executive director of ONF. “We’re committed to serving as a networking consumer advocate, representing the needs of global SDN users by providing standardized approaches that promote competition and best-of-breed solutions. This allows users to achieve maximum organizational impact by innovating and governing the operation of their networks according to their own business objectives, through software that they control.”

https://www.opennetworking.org

Telefónica España Tests Agile Optical Networking with ALU


Telefónica España is testing an agile optical transmission system from Alcatel-Lucent that carries 100 Gbps/200 Gbps/400 Gbps while adapting to different speeds, distances and spectrum. The trial, which ran over Telefónica's live network in Spain, demonstrated the capacity of Telefónica España existing network to operate at different combinations of line rate, reach, and spectrum width to provide the best balance between network performance and resource usage.

Telefónica España is testing the ability to augment network capacity and resilience based on dynamic allocation of resources in the network putting the capacity where it is most needed at a particular time.

Alcatel-Lucent said its agile optical networking technology more than doubles an operator’s fiber capacity without having to invest in additional optical fiber infrastructure.

This trial  demonstrated the capacity of Telefónica España network to scale up by a factor of 2.66 to 23 Terabits per second (Tbps) in a single fibre pair.

"The future integration of 400 Gbps in our core network will enable us answering with optimum quality our clients’ ever growing demand for more bandwidth. Solutions that make the best use of our existing infrastructure, like the photonic mesh technology demonstrated in this trial, are how we will maintain our lead in the marketplace," stated Manuel Fernández Daza, Director Access, Aggregation and Transport Networks Technology and Planning at Telefónica España.

http://www.alcatel-lucent.com

Interoute Implements Infinera DTN-X Across 100G Pan-European Network


Interoute confirmed the deployment of the Infinera DTN-X platform, featuring 500 Gbps, long-haul super-channels, across its Pan-European network.

 Interoute’s Pan-European network connects 102 cities in 30 countries and includes 21 dense city networks (MANs) in Europe’s major business centers and nine subsea landing stations. The carrier's fiber network serves every major European national telecoms provider, as well as major operators in North America, Africa, east and south Asia and the Middle East, including major mobile operators, ISPs, governments, universities and research agencies.

The Infinera DTN-X delivers 500G super-channels based on its Photonic Integrated Circuits (PICs) and FlexCoherent processor.  It offers five Terabits of non-blocking OTN switching per bay, scalable to 240 Tbps in a multi-bay configuration, resulting in more efficient utilization of the 100G waves when compared to conventional WDM architectures. Infinera also said its Bandwidth Virtualization simplifies service deployment, enabling Interoute to deploy networks in days and services in minutes thereby lowering operational costs.

"The DTN-X helps us win in the marketplace," said Jonathan Wright, Vice President, Service Provider at Interoute. "Speed to deliver services is key in our industry. Infinera's solutions have enabled us to deliver anywhere from 10Gb/s to 500Gb/s capacity quickly and allows us to efficiently provision services, as the market dictates."

"The DTN-X continues to gain traction across the globe because customers are realizing the benefits of investing in an optical transport solution that converges OTN switching and WDM transport in the same chassis," said Chris Champion, Vice President, EMEA Sales.

http://www.infinera.com
http://www.interoute.com

Singapore's M1 Deploys NSN's Liquid Core


Singapore's M1 has selected Nokia Siemens Networks to implement its Liquid Core platform and radio network and to refarm GSM 900 MHz frequency to expand its 3G network.

Under the contract, Nokia Siemens Networks will provide its Single RAN with Flexi Multiradio Base Station, coupled with its Multicontroller RNC and Liquid Radio software. As part of the Liquid Core portfolio, the company will also provide its ATCA-based open Mobile Switching Center Server (MSS) and open Media Gateway (MGW) to ensure the resiliency and operational efficiency of the operator’s voice core network. This modernization will ensure an all-IP network for M1. Financial terms were not disclosed.

“A vital business mantra for all operators is to provide the best service experience to their customers, but what is equally vital is doing so cost efficiently,” said Paul Tyler, head of Asia Pacific, Nokia Siemens Networks. “We have well understood the exact requirements of M1 and will provide our advanced Liquid Core platform and refarming service, which are cost efficient, and help increase revenue for the operator.”



Globe Telecom Selects Polaris Wireless OmniLocate


Globe Telecom, one of the leading telecom operators in the Philippines, has selected Polaris Wireless' OmniLocate universal location platform to and refresh its Location-Based Services (LBS) capability.


OmniLocate is a software-based wireless location solution that can be deployed on a standard server inside the wireless operator’s network. OmniLocate can be configured to include Wireless Location Signatures (Polaris WLS), a patented implementation of the 3GPP standardized RF Pattern-Matching (RFPM) location method, which provides high-accuracy location, especially in urban areas and indoors, which makes it uniquely suitable for the densely-populated Philippines market.

Polaris Wireless noted that this contract is the fifteenth deployment of the OmniLocate platform outside the US, the fourth in the Asia-Pacific region, and the thirty-ninth worldwide.

http://www.polariswireless.com/

Sprint Expands Managed Services for the Cloud

Sprint announced new managed network solutions bundled with MPLS transport and customer premise equipment.  The offering includes network design, proactive performance management, CPE monitoring and service level agreements.

“The network is the most important cloud investment a company will make and efficient management of that network is crucial to the success of business-critical applications,” said Mike Fitz, vice president of wireline, Sprint. “Businesses benefit from Sprint’s customized approach to managing customer networks, simplified pricing and a single account team that understands converged, cloud and mobility solutions.”

http://www.sprint.com

ARRIS Acquisition of Motorola Home Almost Complete

ARRIS Group has created a new holding company structure in order to facilitate its pending acquisition of the Motorola Home business from a subsidiary of Google, which ARRIS expects to close Wednesday, April 17, 2013.  The business operations of the company and its subsidiaries will not change as a result of the reorganization.

http://www.arrisi.com

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

NoviFlow's New OpenFlow 1.3 Switch Achieves 200 Gbps


NoviFlow launched its NoviSwitch 1124 and 1248 switches featuring support for OpenFlow 1.3 and capable of achieving speeds of up to 200 Gbps. The move positions the company as an early leader in Software-Defined Networking (SDN), the network optimization technology that brings the benefits of network virtualization and programmability to large data centers, network operators, cloud and financial service providers.

"The OpenFlow protocol has proven itself in real-world SDN deployments by leading companies, such as Google and Facebook. Now we’re giving OpenFlow 1.3 a high-performance boost,” said Dominique Jodoin, president and chief executive officer of NoviFlow.

The NoviSwitch product line is built on the NP-4 network processor platform from EZchip.  Key features of the NoviSwitch 1124 and 1248 include:

• A high-performance system that features the NoviWare® 200 switching software, including support and implementation of OpenFlow 1.3 required features:
• IPv6 support
• Extensible match support
• Extensible 'set field' packet rewriting support
• Extensible context expression in ‘packet-in’
• Provider Backbone Bridging tagging
• Full support of the OpenFlow 1.1 specification

NoviFlow has offices in Sunnyvale, Montreal, and Seattle.

http://www.noviflow.com

Monday, April 15, 2013

An Update from the Open Networking Foundation


Click here to view video:  http://youtu.be/uO9zYdNFGXE

In this interview, Dan Pitt, Executive Director of the Open Networking Foundation, provides a progress report, including:

1:00 - Technical Objectives for ONF in the coming year
2:33 - Adapting OpenFlow for OA&M
3:07 - A new working group for Optical Transport
3:41 - Addressing OpenFlow security
4:10 - Commercial deployments
5:22 - Strengthening the hardware supply chain
6:18 - The ONF Research Associates program
7:18 - Defining a Framework for Services
7:59 - ETSI's Network Functions Virtualization Effort
8:38 - Working with the Open Daylight Project

Rackspace Plans Largest OpenStack-based Public Cloud


Rackspace announced plans to build and run a linked global cloud network for large service providers.

The Rackspace public cloud aims to be the largest OpenStack-based public cloud in the world.  It will served as a networked cloud of clouds through which service providers are linked together.

Rackspace's model will be to recruit service providers who build and operate physical data centers. The Rackspace public cloud will be deployed in these facilities and Rackspace will manage it remotely.

Rackspace said this extension of its public cloud portfolio will give both service providers and their customers access to a network of interconnected global data centers – customers will be able to run their workloads in any data center that is part of the network, while maintaining their business relationship with the local provider of their choice.

The move is also seen as giving a big boost to OpenStack.

http://www.rackspace.com/blog/building-a-global-cloud-network/

Dish Bids $25.5 Billion for Sprint, Countering Softbank's Offer

DISH Network announced a $25.5 billion offer to acquire Sprint Nextel -- a deal they say is a superior value to Sprint shareholders, including greater ownership in a combined company that is better positioned for the future with more spectrum, products, subscribers, financial scale and new opportunities.


The DISH offer consists of $17.3 billion in cash and $8.2 billion in stock. Sprint shareholders would receive $7.00 per share, based upon DISH’s closing price on Friday, April 12, 2013. This consists of $4.76 per share in cash and 0.05953 DISH shares per Sprint share. The cash portion of DISH’s proposal represents an 18% premium over the $4.03 per share implied by the SoftBank proposal, and the equity portion represents approximately 32% ownership in the combined DISH/Sprint versus SoftBank’s proposal of a 30% interest in Sprint alone. Together this represents a 13% premium to the value of the existing SoftBank proposal.

DISH currently has about 14 million satellite TV subscribers.

“The DISH proposal clearly presents Sprint shareholders with a superior alternative to the pending SoftBank proposal,” said Charlie Ergen, Chairman of DISH Network. “Sprint shareholders will benefit from a higher price with more cash while also creating the opportunity to participate more meaningfully in a combined DISH/Sprint with a significantly-enhanced strategic position and substantial synergies that are not attainable through the pending SoftBank proposal.”

"A transformative DISH/Sprint merger will create the only company that can offer customers a convenient, fully-integrated, nationwide bundle of in- and out-of-home video, broadband and voice services. Additionally, the combined national footprints and scale will allow DISH/Sprint to bring improved broadband services to millions of homes with inferior or no access to competitive broadband services. This unique, combined company will have a leadership position in video, data and voice and the necessary broadband spectrum to provide customers with rich content everywhere, all the time,” added Ergen.

In a conference call with investors, DISH said a merger with Sprint presents a unique opportunity to build a highly efficient, multimode network for video delivery.  This would use satellites and 700 MHz terrestrial for broadcast to homes and mobile users, combined with LTE for unicast traffic.

DISH also cited significant CAPEX/OPEX synergies in merging operations, estimated at $37 billion over several years.
DISH said it anticipates that Sprint's pending transaction with Clearwire would be completed, although that is not a condition of its offer.

http://dish.client.shareholder.com/


In December 2012, Sprint agreed to pay  $2.97 per share for remaining shares of Clearwire that it does not already own.  The deal, has been accepted by Clearwire's Board of Directors, equates to a total payment of $2.2 billion for the outstanding 50% equity stake, and results in a total Clearwire enterprise value of approximately $10 billion, including net debt and spectrum lease obligations of $5.5 billion.

 Sprint said its Network Vision architecture will be able to take full advantage of Clearwire’s complementary 2.5 GHz spectrum assets, while achieving operational efficiencies and improved service for customers as the spectrum and network is migrated to LTE standards.

Clearwire holds the largest spectrum portfolio in the U.S. but in upper bands.  Its spectrum is an average 163 MHz in the top 100  U.S. markets.

In October 2012,  SoftBank announced plans to invest $20.1 billion to acquire a 70% in Sprint.  The deal consists of $12.1 billion to be distributed to Sprint stockholders and $8.0 billion of new capital to strengthen Sprint’s balance sheet.  The investment aims to accelerate Sprint's next generation network and its competitive position as the No. 3 U.S. mobile operator.  For Softbank, this represents a major leap beyond its home market of Japan, where it is the No. 3 mobile operator and No. 2 wireline broadband provider. 


Dell Delivers SDN-Enabled Fabric Solutions


Dell Networking introduced a new Active Fabric for SDN, new Active Fabric Manager software and a new S5000 modular LAN/SAN switching platform.

Dell Active Fabric is a flat, fast, any-to-any multipath network architecture.  The new management component uses design wizards to help users set-up and manage non-blocking, high-performance Active Fabrics for handling predominantly east-west, traffic-intensive workloads in virtualized data centers and private clouds.

Dell said its Active Fabric flattens the traditional data center network architecture using high-density and low-latency, fixed-form factor 10/40GbE switches that can be deployed quickly and easily while reaching to hyperscale proportions.

Key features of Dell Active Fabric include:

  • Supports NVOs using the leading hypervisors from Microsoft, VMware and OpenStack.
  • Supports Open Flow-based controllers from leading vendors including Big Switch Networks.
  • Supports legacy programmatic interfaces including Telnet/CLI, TCL, REST, SNMP, Perl and Python scripting
  • Purpose-built for virtualized, converged, and SDN environments
  • High-performance 10GbE & 40GbE L2/L3 multipath fabrics
  • LAN/SAN convergence using Data Center Bridging (iSCSI, Fibre Channel (FC) and Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE)
  • OpenFlow support
  • Standard northbound and southbound interfaces

Dell said SDN offers a logical extension to the enhanced network flexibility its Active Fabric solutions provides. The company also said that it is "one of the only vendors to offer a complete and unbiased approach to SDN encompassing networking virtualization overlays (NVO), OpenFlow and legacy interface capabilities."

The new Dell Networking S5000 is a 1U 10/40GbE top-of-rack LAN/SAN switch equipped with native FC and FCoE capabilities. It is powered by merchant silicon and features Dell's feature-rich operating system and Open Automation framework for integrated automation, scripting and programmable management. The S5000 accommodates four modules allowing customers to populate a single module and add as necessary instead of buying all four modules at once. The S5000 has a maximum of 64 x 10GbE ports, or 48 x Ethernet/FC ports with 16 x 10GbE ports. SAN support includes iSCSI, RoCE, NAS, FCoE and FC fabric services, all on the same platform.

"We’re challenging conventional wisdom with new products and solutions designed to accelerate our customers’ migration to virtualized and cloud data center environments.” said Tom Burns, vice president and general manager, Dell Networking. “We’re excited about these new offerings and their ability to simplify operations, boost performance and improve economics."

http://www.dell.com



Netronome and Metaswitch Develop SDN OpenFlow Gateways

Netronome and Metaswitch disclosed the details of a unique architecture for OpenFlow gateways based on Netronome network flow processing technology and Metaswitch’s SDN-enabled control plane software.


The companies are hosting a demonstration at this week's Open Networking Summit (ONS) in Santa Clara, California, showing OpenFlow for controling network gateways between an MPLS backbone network and two IP networks. Each gateway uses Netronome’s NFP silicon and flexible and scalable SDN OpenFlow forwarding architecture, controlled by Metaswitch's SDN control plane for MPLS-signaled networks.

“We are excited about the partnership with Netronome and opportunity to bring this carrier SDN solution to the Open Networking Summit,” said Andy Randall, senior vice president of networking technologies at Metaswitch Networks. “The NFP provides us with the programmable dataplane that unlocks many differentiating features of our control plane software, which is at the heart of devices deployed in every major global carrier network. Together, we are at the forefront of commercializing OpenFlow-based SDN solutions and look forward to building networks with our complementary technologies.”

Netronome’s NFP‐6xxx, which is powered by 96 packet processing cores and 120 multi‐threaded flow processing cores operating at up to 1.2 GHz, delivers 200 Gbps of packet processing with deep packet inspection, network and security processing, and I/O virtualization for millions of simultaneous flows. The NFP‐6xxx is the industry’s only processor specifically designed for tight coupling with x86 processors.

http://www.netronome.com
http://www.metaswitch.com

Genachowski to become Senior Fellow at Aspen Institute

Julius Genachowski has accepted a senior fellowship at the Aspen Institute Communications and Society Program upon his resignation from the FCC in the coming weeks.

The Aspen Institute is an educational and policy studies organization based in Washington, D.C. The Aspen Institute Communications and Society Program addresses the societal impact of communications and information technologies, and provides a multi-disciplinary venue for considered judgment on communications policy issues.

"I'm enthusiastic about helping the Aspen Institute advance its important mission," said Genachowski.  "The Internet and mobile are having a transformative impact on our economy and society. The Institute has an unparalleled ability to convene business, government, and non-profit leaders to address the effect of digital technologies on many of the world's most vexing problems, and I'm looking forward to being involved in that effort."

http://www.aspeninstitute.org

Genachowski is the 5th consecutive FCC chair to accept this fellowship after ending the chairmanship, including Kevin Martin, Michael Powell and Reed Hundt .

In 2010, Blair Levin, Executive Director of the Omnibus Broadband Initiative at the Federal Communications Commission, accepted a Communications and Society Fellowship at the Aspen Institute after leaving the FCC.




AppliedMicro Sells TPACK Subsidiary to Altera


Altera agreed to acquire AppliedMicro's TPACK A/S aubsidiary for an undisclosed sum.  TPACK, which is based in Copenhagen Denmark, develops FPGA-based OTN (optical transport network) products targeting packet and optical networking equipment suppliers. AppliedMicro will retain license rights to TPACK technology following the divestiture.

Altera and AppliedMicro will also undertake joint development and marketing of optimized solutions for data centers. The strategic cooperation initiative will enable the two companies to combine advanced Altera FPGAs with silicon solutions from AppliedMicro, including the company's full line of connectivity and ARM 64-bit X-Gene Server on a Chip products.

"This agreement underscores our continued focus on enabling integrated, purpose-built solutions for our data center OTN customers," said George Jones, vice president, co-GM, Connectivity Products of AppliedMicro. "Combining Altera's advanced FPGA technology with our X-Gene Server on a Chip, Gearbox, PQX and QPSK products will provide our customers with highly optimized, cost-effective designs for next-generation data center infrastructure."

http://www.apm.com
http://www.altera.com

Cyan Appoints CMO


Cyan named Joe Cumello as its chief marketing officer (CMO) to oversee all aspects of the company’s global marketing efforts.

Cumello was most recently vice president of marketing at Sidera Networks, a major provider of fiber-­‐based communications services to large enterprises, data centers, and carriers.

Prior to Sidera, Cumello was vice president of marketing at SafeNet, a global provider of data protection solutions, and a senior director of global marketing at Ciena.

http://www.cyaninc.com