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Technology Stocks : Ascend Communications (ASND)
ASND 210.50+0.6%Nov 21 3:59 PM EST

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To: margin_man who wrote (20122)10/31/1997 8:05:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Read Replies (1) of 61433
 
Network Hardware Sales Moving On Internet - Study Newsbyte News Network - Tue, Oct 28 1997 SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1997 OCT 28 (NB) -- By Craig Menefee. The Internet's explosive growth is having broad effects on where network hardware vendors are finding their market, according to a new study released by market research firm Dataquest. The study's author calls the Internet the fastest-growing customer segment for data networking equipment. Not surprisingly, say Dataquest, Cisco Systems Inc. and Ascend Communications, Inc. hold the lion's share of Internet-specific equipment sales -- for now. According to Dataquest, network equipment sales into the Internet, as opposed to internal corporate network markets, surpassed $2 billion in 1996 for the first time. This total represents a bit over 11 percent of the total $18 billion network equipment market. John Coons, director and principal analyst for Dataquest's Internet Infrastructure program, told Newsbytes he could not predict where the market is going with any accuracy because it is the first time Dataquest has looked specifically at this market segment. "We're going to do this again at the beginning of 1998," he added. "So in April we'll have two points, which is much better than one. Plus, in the next few months we'll go talk to the ISPs and find out what they expect to do. So in April we'll do a full five-year forecast." Asked for his gut feeling on where the market is headed, he replied: "These equipment markets are growing fast -- maybe between 50 and 100 percent aggregated growth rate. The question I have is about this 11 percent -- is that going to hold or will it increase? My gut feel is that it will increase. "So you're going to have a total market that in 1996 was at $18 billion. In 1997 we could be looking at $30 to $40 billion. Eleven percent of that would be respectable, and if this goes up to 15 or 15 percent -- the Internet will be taking a larger and larger share of the equipment market." Coons said he thinks that may account for the entry into Internet markets of equipment vendors like 3Com and Bay Networks. "I think they're all playing a game of catch-up," Coons claimed. "The Internet is growing faster than any network ever has. These equipment vendors not only have to keep up with volume, they have to keep up with scale. The devices they ship into the Internet have to keep handling more and more traffic, more and more sessions, more and more simultaneous users. It's a tremendous challenge. It's not like selling 10,000 seats to Ford or DuPont -- the next year you don't have to sell 100,000 seats to them. But that's the scale of Internet growth." The 1996 data were gathered as part of Dataquest's "Internet Infrastructure Network Equipment Market Statistics" perspective report on market size and vendor market share estimates worldwide. The report focuses on network equipment shipments to Internet service providers (ISPs) and backbone operators. According to the report, routers and access equipment drive the market for Internet infrastructure hardware. Cisco and Ascend hold strong market positions in those areas, accounting for their dominant position in the 1996 report's findings. Routers accounted for 59 percent of the total market, while access equipment came to 25 percent of total 1996 Internet infrastructure sales revenues. Coons says the Cisco/Ascend dominance is no longer going without challenge. "There are a dozen or more start-ups about to enter the market with an array of new multigigabit routing platforms," said Coons, who noted the new products will share the stage with Cisco GSR and Ascend GRF "go fast" routers. Asked for examples, he cited Juniper, Avici, Berkeley Networks, Pluris, GigaPacket, Ennovate, NeoNet, Netcore, and Torrent. "Some of this technology is so new, these companies don't even want you talking about them," Coons added. The new super-fast devices will provide IP (Internet Protocol) communications over asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) or synchronous optical network (SONET) connections at OC-12 and even OC-48 speeds. The new technology, stated Coons, will range "from hyperspeed address lookup mechanisms to processors fully capable of enforcing complex policies at these breakneck speeds." The Dataquest World Wide Web site at dataquest.com has further information on the Internet network hardware and other recent reports.
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