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To: signist who wrote (14464)7/14/1999 9:32:00 AM
From: Sector Investor  Respond to of 42804
 
Bid at $15 <VBG> First trade at $15 1/16



To: signist who wrote (14464)7/14/1999 1:56:00 PM
From: Robert G. Harrell  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 42804
 
So what is different about this from our wireless traffic driver? (Other than that they have the balls to make it sound like they invented the technology.)
mrv.com
Bob



To: signist who wrote (14464)7/14/1999 7:20:00 PM
From: signist  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 42804
 
Lucent Launches DWDM Metro Net Technology

(COMTEX)
Jul 14, 1999 (Tech Web - CMP via COMTEX) -- An optical-networking
technology for metropolitan applications launched by Lucent
Technologies Wednesday may not render other high-speed,
data-transmission techniques as roadkill. But it may fit the bill for
short-distance communications if the price is right.

Lucent unveiled its WaveStar OpticAir system, which uses DWDM to boost
network capacity from point-to-point through the air as opposed to over
fiber-optic cable. The technology, when it becomes available next
March, initially will give customers the ability to ship data at about
2.4 gigabits-per-second.

Using beams of light through the air is useful because it can go where
fiber cannot go, for example, in cities where it is hard to lay new
cable. Another case might be to transmit data between buildings that
are separated by a river.

Lucent would not give any pricing for the system but agreed that it
costs about $100,000 to install fiber in a building. Its economic
feasibility will be key to whether customers will buy the systems,
analysts said.

The applications for this type of high-speed transmission might be
broadcast TV, data transfers between banks or even transmission between
gigabit Ethernet LANs, said Kathy Szelag, vice president of marketing
at Lucent's Optical Network group.

But, analysts said, unless Lucent can solve certain engineering rules
that come with all "free-space infrared" systems, the technology itself
is not really a breakthrough. The receivers, which are placed on top of
a building or in a window, must be line of sight, as in any infrared
system. Also, the signals are at the mercy of atmospheric conditions,
said Tom Nolle, president of CIMI, a Vorhees, N.J-based consulting
company.

"Will they use some form of wavelength agility or spread spectrum
optics to deal with that, or will they continue to use the same
vulnerabilities?" Nolle said. "If they don't do something to address
atmospheric interference, the whole concept of DWDM is moot because the
risk of putting a lot of traffic here would be unacceptable."

Lucent executives said no amount of fog will shut the systems down.
Their ability to transmit at 1.5 microns means light travels further
and better, they said. "We can travelabout twice as far as you can
see," said Frank Galuppo, product manager for the WaveStar OpticAir
System.

In poor conditions, the system also will "throttle" down, and if it
shuts down due to poor conditions, it automatically reconfigures
itself. The technology has a range of about 5 kilometers.

The use of DWDM in a metropolitan application has a lot of interest
because it is immune to FCC license restrictions, Nolle said. Also,
optical wavelengths are more focused vs. microwaves, so there is less
interference from cross-talk. Other analysts said the technology is not
for everyone, but if you cannot get fiber out to a site, it could be an
option.

"The breakthrough is they are using DWDM, with some added
technologies," said Ken Kelly, senior analyst at Dataquest, San Jose,
Calif. "It gives them another tool to fit in their networking box."

-0-

Copyright (C) 1999 CMP Media Inc.

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