All posts under tagged ‘Infrastructure’

Feed for all posts filed under "Infrastructure"

Alcatel-Lucent CEO and Chairman Out

Source: gigaom.com

During its second- quarter earnings call earlier this morning, telco gear maker Alcatel-Lucent said its chairman, Serge Tchuruk, and its CEO, Patricia Russo, would step down. Both said they were stepping down because consolidation after the 2006 merger was complete, and now the company needed someone to take it in a new direction. Russo will leave at the end of the year or sooner if the board finds a replacement, and Tchuruk will leave Oct. 1. Russo especially had faced demands for her departure as the newly combined company lagged.

Demand is falling for Alcatel-Lucent equipment, while its carrier customers contemplate the slow migration to 4G technologies such as LTE and WiMAX. The next-generation networks are coming but are still several quarters out,with LTE networks coming online in 2010 and full deployment closer to 2012. WiMAX is growing now, but it’s a smaller market. Another wrinkle is that some carriers such as Vodafone in the UK are content with their 3.5G networks and don’t plan to move to LTE for even longer.

Given its main customers’ plans around network build-outs, plus the lackluster economic environment, Alcatel-Lucent has been seeking alternatives to telco networking gear, including outfitting electric utilities with smart-grid equipment. It’s a shame that the Alcatel-Lucent deal is faring so poorly, because more consolidation is still needed in this sector.

Keep Existing Infrastructure and Deploy VoIP with Packet8

Source: www.voip-news.com

8×8, Inc. has released Packet8 Virtual Trunking. It is a broadband agnostic IP trunking solution that lets businesses take advantage of VoIP savings while retaining existing phone hardware.

“Many businesses are motivated to migrate to VoIP phone service to take advantage of cost and performance efficiencies, but are reluctant to do so because they already own or are leasing an on-premise business phone system,” said 8×8 Vice President of Marketing & Sales Huw Rees. “The Packet8 Virtual Trunking solution now enables these companies to realize significant savings on their monthly phone bills while using their existing equipment and data network. Unlike other trunking solutions that require a dedicated access line or data connection, Virtual Trunking, as with all Packet8 VoIP services, is broadband agnostic and will operate over any high speed network connection from any location worldwide. These virtual trunks will also provide a conduit for the provision of additional IP services over time, thereby expanding and enhancing the value of customers’ investments in existing phone system equipment.”

It’s ideal for the company with a costly phone system that they don’t want to replace.

“We believe that two-thirds of all U.S. businesses will have some form of VoIP phone service by 2011, whether it’s a hosted PBX service, an IP-PBX switch or a hybrid solution,” said In-Stat Senior Research Analyst David Lemelin.

Published on June 13th, 2008 under , , , , , ,

Crowe: Online Video Will Keep Fiber’s Future Full

Source: gigaom.com

Given its proximity to the Broomfield, Colo., headquarters of Level 3, there’s always a good chance that the Silicon Flatirons telecom conference will get a visit from Jim Crowe, Level 3’s CEO. He made the short drive up Hwy. 36 on Monday afternoon for a well-reasoned talk about long-term trends in communications that had several key takeaways, among them:

  • Internet video use is here to stay, and will only increase going forward
  • Bundling services with devices is yesterday’s strategy
  • Legislators and regulators are right to be concerned about the potential for monopolistic practices by AT&T, Verizon and cable companies
  • Net Neutrality violations could be handled better by the FTC than the FCC

According to Crowe, between 60 and 70 percent of the IP backbone provider’s traffic is currently video, a trend that he thinks will only increase, perhaps even substantially should applications like Cisco’s Telepresence take off. “It’s kind of a full employment act” for backbone providers, he joked.

While it’s not too hard to say Internet video will be more popular, Crowe did take a somewhat divergent tack by forseeing a future in which communications services, devices and applications will separate into different markets, much like they already have in the PC arena. The popularity of the tightly bundled iPhone aside, Crowe said that standard interfaces and operating systems for wireless devices will eventually produce more innovation by the best of each market breed, putting bundled plans “on the wrong side of economics.”

On Net Neutrality — a topic practically invented at the Silicon Flatirons conference — Crowe said that when it comes to possible monopoly abuses by the big carriers, “you ought to be worried” since the Bell companies “have a long history of abusing” their facility-based advantages. And while cable companies might have “a far less colorful legal history, competition is not in their DNA,” Crowe said.

However, that doesn’t mean Crowe is in favor of pre-emptive legislation, which most Net Neutrality proponents prefer. Instead, Crowe (like many other speakers at the conference) said abuses could be better monitored by the Federal Trade Commission, under existing anti-trust laws.

“I just think after 10 or 15 years of getting everything they want, consumers will not tolerate” anyone blocking or limiting their access to applications and content, he said. If there are violations, then “anti-trust courts are only a few lawyers away, and may be a lot more efficient than regulatory bodies, who have to react to politics.”

Paul Kapustka, former managing editor for GigaOM, now has his own blog at Sidecut Reports.

Published on February 12th, 2008 under , , , , , , , , ,

Member of "Hype Media! Network"