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To: Stoctrash who wrote (3123)11/24/1999 10:18:00 AM
From: BillyG  Respond to of 4134
 
News from Corvis, the optical networking company started by the founder of Ciena......
news.cnet.com

Start-up pushes tech for cheaper, faster
networks
By Corey Grice
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
November 24, 1999, 4:00 a.m. PT

Equipment provider Corvis wants to do for fiber optic networking what the
commercial jetliner did for coast-to-coast travel.

One of a handful of similar networking start-ups, Corvis makes fiber-optic equipment that
lets telecommunications carriers shuttle voice and data across networks faster and, more
importantly, at a lower cost.

In the past week Corvis has signed deals with Williams Communications and Qwest
Communications. The telecommunications firms plan to test Corvis' equipment as they
work to upgrade their high-speed networks.

Corvis executives, who joke that theirs is a "pre-revenue
company," hope the trials will lead to actual sales of their
equipment in early 2000.

A rapidly changing telecommunications landscape has
given birth to a number of firms that are building new,
state-of-the-art networks. To support this building boom, a
cottage industry of network equipment start-ups has
emerged to best serve new communications carriers like
Qwest and Williams. Corvis' business alliances are only the
latest examples of a new network equipment provider riding
the current telecommunications wave.

Other beneficiaries include Qtera, in addition to Sycamore
Networks and Juniper Networks. These start-ups posted
two of the year's most successful initial public offerings.

A privately held company formed in 1997 by Ciena founder
David Huber, Corvis makes complex networking hardware like routers and management
software that keeps a high-speed network running smoothly. It currently employs about
200 people.

Corvis' network technology allows data to be sent along a network up to 2,000 miles from
its original source. This is a breakthrough, analysts say, as previous technology required
carriers to give an electrical "boost" to data transmissions approximately every 180 miles
to keep the data moving along. The equipment to provide so-called electrical regeneration
points is expensive, and increases carriers' overall network costs.

Corvis is not the only firm working on technology to keep data moving along fiber-optic
networks. Sycamore and Qtera are building similar hardware, while Ciena plans to unveil
its own device to shuttle data over a network. Ciena's technology is scheduled to go into
testing next April.

"We can reduce the costs for carriers and we allow them to provide service more rapidly,"
Corvis executive vice president Glenn Falcao said. "We eliminate cost by eliminating
electric regenerators, which are the most expensive part of the network.

"When you eliminate equipment your ongoing operating costs are reduced because your
maintenance and provisioning costs go down," Falcao said. "Our real value is to make the
carriers more competitive."

To remain competitive, new carriers such as Qwest, Level 3 Communications and
Bermuda-based Global Crossing continually update technology and equipment in their
networks--a boon for Corvis and other networking firms.

"There's a breakthrough happening in optical networking that eliminates some of the
electrical regeneration points," Qwest vice president of emerging technologies Vab Goel
said. "It would take months to provision lines in the past. Now we can do it in hours."

Nearly 60 percent of network service providers said network hardware constraints keep
them from making the transistion to a fiber-optic network, according to a recent study by
Forrester Research.