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To: Joe Wagner who wrote (1638)11/20/1999 9:04:00 AM
From: J Fieb  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4808
 
One of the BIG dogs needs help............

techweb.com

Lucent Is An Enterprise 'Extra'
(11/19/99, 7:51 p.m. ET)
By Salvatore Salamone, InternetWeek
Murray Hill, N.J.--Lucent's got a lot to crow about these days. Unfortunately, that doesn't include its enterprise IT business.

At a recent corporate strategy briefing at company headquarters, Lucent was basking in impressive financial results. The company just wrapped up a year in which it saw revenue grow 20.4 percent, to $38.3 billion. And net income on that revenue was $3.8 billion, up 46.4 percent.

A feeble showing in enterprise networking was one noteworthy blemish. Most of the company's growth has come from its core markets: equipment and services aimed at telcos and Internet service providers. But it's a different story when it comes to enterprise networking.

"We are an afterthought in the enterprise data market," said Rich McGinn, Lucent's chairman and CEO. If Lucent's enterprise role were listed as part of movie credits, McGinn said, "We are down there with the best boy and key grip."

Lucent ranks itself behind Cisco, Nortel, 3Com, Fujitsu, and IBM in enterprise networking.

McGinn said the enterprise data part of Lucent's business has shown little growth.

"In hospital terms, our enterprise data efforts have flat-lined," he said.

Many in the industry think a quick fix--if Lucent is looking for one--is to buy a large data networking company. But that is not the otherwise-acquisitive company's grand plan.

"We are not looking to acquire a legacy data networking company," said McGinn.

Instead of one quick and dirty acquisition, the plan instead is to grow the enterprise business through a number of more modest moves.

"We'll focus on internal investment in our own research, more partnering, and selective acquisitions," said Bill O'Shea, executive vice president and CEO of enterprise networks at Lucent. "We don't have an acquisition strategy; we have a business strategy that will use acquisitions."

The main enterprise networking areas that O'Shea is targeting are converged networks and VPNs. For example, he pointed out that when it comes to converged networks, Lucent will leverage its strong position in fields like call centers, voice messaging, voice systems (PBXs), and unified messaging.

"We've already moved some of these systems into the converged networking arena," O'Shea said. Lucent has equipment in Internet call centers around the world and has shifted its Definity line from simply operating as a proprietary PBX--as it had several years ago--to an IP-enabled message system.

One enterprise networking area where O'Shea sees great opportunity is software. Specifically, Lucent will "focus on communication software that ties infrastructure to applications," O'Shea said. This includes customer relationship management software and universal messaging.



LGTO's got some BIG plans...........

techweb.com

Legato Gets Ontrack
(11/19/99, 11:23 a.m. ET)
By Joseph F. Kovar, Computer Reseller News
Legato Systems, a data storage management software company, on Thursday said that it will acquire Ontrack Data International.

Ontrack, Minneapolis, is a manufacturer of data recovery software and service solutions.

Ontrack is expected to offer Palo Alto, Calif.-based Legato desktop tools to enable it to expand into the ASP market, Legato said.

The acquisition, the latest in a string for Legato, is part of a strategy formulated over a year ago under which the company plans to acquire the technology to get into SANs and clustering in a big way, said Jim Chappell, vice president of Legato's data availability division.

"Ontrack has years of expertise on how to get data off adisk, both in-lab and remote, including over the Internet," Chappell said. "We feel it is important to offer customers options, as not everybody does their backups and they need a way to recover if the drives do fail. Also, often a backup looks right, but a logical failure could hide problems. Ontrack can go to the disk system to find logical failures"

Ontrack's products and services will continue to be available through Legato's distribution channels, Chappell said.

The transaction, expected to close in late January, will be accounted for under purchase accounting. Legato will offer 0.1491 shares for each share of Ontrack's common stock, along with about $20 million cash, bringing the value of the acquisition to about $134 million.

Legato's stock fell 13/16, to 75 15/16, on the Nasdaq Thursday.



To: Joe Wagner who wrote (1638)11/20/1999 11:18:00 AM
From: J Fieb  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4808
 
Joe W., We will have to follow this story unfold........

zdnet.com

Cisco's Corporate Spin On Internet Video
By Fred Dawson, Inter@ctive Week
November 15, 1999 12:00 AM ET

Internet video may not be ready for prime time in the mass market, but Cisco Systems believes it has a way to knock down the remaining barriers to widescale use of Internet Protocol video streaming and videoconferencing in the business world.

Cisco (www.cisco.com) now has two initiatives in the works with various partners to develop some of the missing technology pieces needed to deliver high-quality Internet Protocol-based video over enterprise networks, as well as private IP networks run by application service providers (ASPs).

"Unlike public networks, corporate networks are fully managed with sufficient bandwidth to support delivery of high-quality video to every desktop," notes Heather Rose, group manager for product marketing at Cisco's video Internet services unit. "At the same time, streaming and conferencing technology has matured to the point where companies see they can derive real benefits from use of video."

In coming weeks, Cisco will bring out two products aimed at delivering IP-based streaming video and videoconferencing over enterprise networks. For streaming video, Cisco will release a new version of its IP/TV server software. For videoconferencing, the company is set to come out with a new IP/VC line, based on videoconferencing technology developed by RADVision.

"We are driving business adoption of IP-based video by investing in products and technologies that make it as sharp and reliable as a TV image," says Jack Bradley, general manager at Cisco's video Internet services unit.

For video streaming, Cisco is releasing Version 3.0 of its IP/TV server software, which is built on the Windows Media Technologies platform from Microsoft. Cisco also is introducing a line of broadcast servers under the IP/TV 3400 banner.

The streaming software, which supports the Motion Picture Experts Group 1, 2 and 4 standards and multicasting, makes use of the high bandwidth capacities of private enterprise networks, where video can be delivered at speeds well above 500 kilobits per second, Rose says.

Although streaming based on Windows Media Technologies is built to navigate less robust public networks, IP/TV taps into the latest Internet Engineering Task Force standards such as IP Multicast, Real-Time Streaming Protocol and Real-Time Transport Protocol to add a higher level of quality-of-service management.

"The IP/TV protocols tend to work best with managed routers and switches, whereas the protocols Microsoft uses assume that the routers and switches across the public Internet aren't going to be cooperating with each other in a particular streaming session," Rose explains. "By building on Windows Media we're able to control both the Microsoft server and our server, allowing the user to pull up whichever server and client options are most appropriate for the media being streamed."

The broadcast server hardware allows the corporate network operator or an ASP to create a distributed network for video streaming, thereby avoiding the potential congestion that comes with handling video from a single point in the network, Rose says. "The system automatically locates the server that's the best access point for any given user," she adds.

Cisco demonstrated its IP/TV technology as part of last month's United Nations NetAid event. The company worked with the University of Oregon to multicast the 14-hour event, carried to more than 150 universities around the world via Internet2. Students at the University of Oregon watched broadcast-quality concert images from their dormitory rooms or campus cybercaf‚s using Cisco IP/TV client software.

Call for conferences

Cisco's move into the IP videoconferencing realm stems from customer demand for help at the network system level to ensure reliable performance in IP-based videoconferences, Rose says. "We got into this because customers really want to use this technology if the performance quality they're looking for is there," she says.

Cisco is using technology developed by RADVision to establish a gateway interface between the IP-based H.323 standard from International Telecommunication Union and the ITU's older H.320 standard for non-IP videoconferencing systems. The IP/VC product group also includes gatekeeper and proxy software for managing sessions and quality of service, and a multipoint control unit that allows participants in multiple locations to join a videoconference with full, real-time interactivity as well as data collaboration under the T.120 standard.