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Intel buys QLogic networking assets for $125m

By Shara Tibken, Dow Jones Newswires
Monday 23 January 2012
Deal seen bolstering chip maker's data centre, supercomputer solutions.

Intel Corp. agreed to acquire QLogic Corp.'s InfiniBand business for $125 million in cash, giving it networking technology for the growing and competitive supercomputer market.

The deal also is seen benefiting Intel's data-center operations, where revenue jumped 17% in 2011 and topped $10 billion for the first time. Kirk Skaugen, general manager of Intel's data center and connected system group, said the technology will "bring increased options" to the company's data-center customers.

Skaugen noted that the acquisition will help Intel achieve "exascale" computing performance by 2018, or a quintillion operations per second. That is a hundred times more than today's fastest supercomputers.

Click here to find out more!Supercomputers help tackle the toughest scientific problems, including simulating commercial products like new drugs and defense-related applications such as weapons design and code breaking. Most of the biggest machines are used in government-owned labs, but many smaller variants have been used by companies for years in designing products like cars and drugs.

Intel has said it expects the top 100 supercomputers in the world to use about 8 million computer processors in 2019, up from a projected 1 million in 2013.

Intel expects the deal to close by April, and QLogic said the asset sale should be neutral to its per-share earnings. Intel said "a significant number" of employees associated with QLogic's InfiniBand business are expected to accept offers to join Intel. The company declined to specify the number.

Intel shares, up 29% over the past 12 months, rose 1.6% to $26.79 in recent trading. QLogic, down 3.7% over the same period, gained 1% to $16.71.

High-performance computing has been a big focus for Intel and fellow semiconductor makers Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and Nvidia Corp. While supercomputing isn't a high-volume business, the processors typically are top-performing and command higher prices.

In addition, Intel has been expanding its offerings in the data center sector beyond servers. To give it exposure to the networking industry, the company bought Ethernet switch chip maker Fulcrum Microsystems Inc. last year. Intel is expecting data center revenue to double within five years.

Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon said Intel has been building its capabilities in the data center to play to its strong suit--high-performing chips. While its processors aren't as power efficient as some rival architectures, they are able to address compute-intensive tasks. Supercomputing is particularly attractive because cost and power consumption are less of a focus for the users.

"It's all about performance," Rasgon said."Intel's highest level of technology is going into this area, and it's growing."

Meanwhile, QLogic Chief Executive Simon Biddiscombe said at a conference earlier this month that the company's InfiniBand technology is preferred to other forms of networking for high-performance computing in part because of its low latency.

QLogic on Monday said it will focus on growth opportunities for the data center as the sale strengthens its cash position.

Melodie Warner contributed to this article.

Huawei India expects consumer device sales to grow 25% this FY

By Kenan Machado, Dow Jones Newswires
Monday 23 January 2012


Chinese company aims to benefit from rising demand for Internet data cards and smartphones.

The Indian unit of Huawei Technologies Co. expects its revenue from sales of consumer devices to increase 25% this fiscal year, helped by growing demand for products such as smartphones and equipment that help people connect to the Internet, a senior executive said.

The telecommunications equipment maker expects about $500 million from sales of consumer devices in India in the fiscal year through March, compared with about $400 million last year, Marketing Director Anand Narang told Dow Jones Newswires in a recent interview.

India is one of the top five markets for Huawei, accounting for nearly 10% of its revenue in 2011. China-based Huawei's financial year runs from January to December, while that of its Indian unit is from April-March.

In India, it gets about 40% of revenue from consumer devices, which also include television set-top boxes. Its other main divisions are the network business division for telecom carriers, which makes up 35%-40%, and the enterprise division that sells networking products to non-telecom customers.

In the consumer devices division, it gets 40% of revenue from set-top boxes, which are used to decode TV signals, and the rest equally from Internet data cards and smartphones.

Its business of selling Internet cards and smartphones to telecom companies is facing pricing pressure, Narang said in the recent interview. Huawei makes these devices for companies which sell them under their own brands.

Rising debt costs and low tariffs have forced phone companies to seek lower prices from vendors such as Huawei, Narang said. But increased volumes will help Huawei offset the price pressure, he added.

To counter the pricing pressure, the company is planning to increase the sales of its self-branded devices where margins are better, Narang said.

Huawei declined to disclose its earnings margins for India.

It expects to increase retail sales of its branded devices to 20%-30% of overall revenue in the next five fiscal years, from 1% now, Narang said.

With the Indian government making it mandatory for cable operators to digitize their signals by December 2014, Huawei is witnessing strong demand for set-top boxes, Narang said.

It sold over 5.0 million set-top boxes in the last fiscal year, he said.

Sales of smartphones year to date have doubled from 4.0 million handsets last fiscal year, Narang said. Sales of Internet cards have grown 20%-25% from the 3.0 million sold in the last financial year, he added.

Net Optics Acquires 2

Net Optics, Inc., the leading provider of Intelligent Access and Monitoring Architecture, today announced its acquisition of Triplelayer, a private Australia-based distributor, and its sister company, nMetrics, a market leader in network and application analysis software. Net Optics now becomes the only provider to offer customers an integrated solution embodying total network visibility along with deep insight, statistics and analysis capabilities. The first solution featuring the companies' combined strengths will be the innovative appTap™. Unique in the industry, the appTap offers unprecedented advanced visibility and analytics for remote and branch offices.

Net Optics and Triplelayer already have an eight-year history of successful joint deployments for some of the world's largest telecommunications providers, financial services firms and enterprises across the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region. Triplelayer has been the primary distributor of Net Optics products in APAC during the past two years.

"Our vision with this acquisition was to help our customers increase network access and consolidate tools to achieve a monitoring architecture that delivers end-to-end visibility and lower cost," said Bob Shaw, CEO of Net Optics. "We also wanted to provide our customers an opportunity to scale their overall network performance and security. By incorporating existing nMetrics technologies into our own solutions, we are able to make advanced technology not only easy to use, but extremely cost-efficient for our customers."

Net Optics Inc.

2012 optical industry trends

by Sinclair Vass, JDSU
January 12, 2012

If the 2011 calendar year could be described in three words, they would be “explosive bandwidth growth.” Both wired and wireless networks were stretched as consumers continued to adopt network intensive technologies at a fast pace.

The main driver of bandwidth demand continues to be real-time entertainment, mainly video. According to Sandvine, in 2009, 29 percent of all Internet traffic during peak hours in the U.S. was real-time entertainment. By 2011, that number jumped to 49 percent, with Netflix streaming alone accounting for 30 percent of overall Internet usage during peak times.

To put network demand in perspective, every 60 seconds consumers downloaded 13,000 hours worth of music from Pandora, posted more than 600 videos to YouTube, and used 370,000 minutes of voice time on Skype.

In the mobile space, 4G LTE became mainstream as carriers began deploying the new, faster networks. Almost all major carriers are now in some stage of such deployments. As more consumers use smartphones and the applications they offer, upgrading backhaul networks also became vital, with as many as 16 backhaul networks being upgraded at a time.

But as fast as the wireless carriers can upgrade their networks, users are immediately pushing those networks back to their new limits. The root cause of this is data usage. For example, every 60 seconds consumers made 695,000 mobile updates to Facebook and downloaded more than 13,000 iPhone applications in 2011.

In other areas of the tech industry, developers and technologists were exploring new ways to make our interaction with technology more seamless by using applications like voice and gesture recognition. While some gaming and computing offerings already use the first generation of these applications, next-generation versions will enable us to interact more virtually with our electronics and even our cars by using voice commands or via the wave of a hand. The race is on to develop more compact, higher performance, and cost-effective optical hardware that will support these emerging new applications.

Let’s consider how these trends will affect the optical communications industry in 2012.

Optical supply chain for telecommunications becomes more on-demand
The main challenge for carriers and network equipment manufacturers (NEMs) has not been the recent growth in bandwidth demand itself, but the fact that the growth has come in fits and spurts – making forecasting unpredictable at best. As a result, many in the optics industry have begun to adopt an on-demand supply chain model, with widespread adoption of vendor managed inventory (VMI) methods or other demand-pull systems.

This trend will continue into 2012, to the point that the vast majority of product shipped to equipment manufacturers will be VMI driven. This practice will enable vendors to react faster and more flexibly to demand changes.

Carriers become aware of self-aware networks
Many consumers are not willing to pay more for services, even though they use more bandwidth every year. As a result, carriers must operate their networks more efficiently. One of the best ways to accomplish this goal is to more proactively manage bandwidth provisioning in the optical domain.

This is why “self-aware” networks gained the attention of most operators in 2011 and why they represent a major evolution in transport network design. In these new networks, optical wavelength connections will be dynamically created, re-routed, or removed according to local network bandwidth needs. Self-aware capabilities will drastically reduce overall network operating costs for the carrier.

While self-aware networks were still in development in 2011, first deployments could start in late 2012 or early 2013. Operators now know what a self-aware network looks like, what it can do, and what it will cost. This coming year will see operators deciding how to best integrate the technology into their next-generation networks and selecting their preferred equipment for full commercial deployment in 2013.

40G reaches mainstream, with 100G close behind
In 2011, 40G deployments continued at a rapid pace with strong demand from China and EMEA. The main driver in China was the need for greater overall Internet speeds, while EMEA’s demand was driven by rising sales of tablets and smartphones. A lot of NEMs are talking about 100G, but 40G is now being deployed all over the world and will continue to play an important role in networks once 100G is readily available.

Hardware for 100G networks began shipping in 2011, but not all parts of the technology are ready. Long-haul transponders for 100G are still in development as the industry decides on the best configuration. Some 100G components still need to be reduced in size and power consumption before the technology can reach full-scale deployment stages.

The short-distance market has been figured out and could see initial deployments in late 2012. But the long-haul market is still unclear.

Tunable networks now the norm
The entire industry is seeking components that are smaller in size, consume less power, and provide improved functionality, while simultaneously supporting the continued aggressive price reduction trends in the telecommunications equipment market. With this in mind, it is no wonder that the tunable XFP transceiver saw rapid deployment in 2011. At this point, the tunable XFP has all but replaced the 300-pin transponder, and we will see continued growth for the tunable XFP throughout 2012.

Also in 2012, the tunable SFP+ transceiver will be brought into production. The SFP+ offers an even smaller form factor, higher density, and lower power consumption. In the short term, the SFP+ will be used to provide tunable features further towards the edge of the network. In the long term, it could replace the XFP form factor for all tunable applications.

Sinclair Vass is senior director of marketing within the Communications and Commercial Optical Products Business Segment at JDSU.

KT Picks NSN for LTE

KT has selected Nokia Siemens Networks as one of its LTE (4G) mobile broadband infrastructure and services vendors. The operator plans to meet the fast growing demand for mobile broadband and smartphone data services by re-farming its 1.8GHz band. This will allow KT to offer its subscribers a superior, 4G, mobile broadband experience by mid 2012.

According to KT: “We are happy to partner with Nokia Siemens Networks and are confident of the company’s mobile broadband capabilities and extended support services. Nokia Siemens Networks’ enhanced focus on mobile broadband will certainly help us deliver superior customer experience with the launch of LTE services.”

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