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To: Boplicity who wrote (52141)12/1/1999 9:49:00 AM
From: Ruffian  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 152472
 
Cisco gets wise to wireless networking
By Ben Heskett
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
December 1, 1999, 5:00 a.m. PT

Nineteen ninety-nine may be remembered as the year Cisco Systems got wise to
wireless networking.

Through a collection of acquisitions and alliances, Cisco has assembled an array of
technology this year it hopes can fill the holes in its bread-and-butter network switches and
routing device lineup.

The implications of Cisco's entry into various wireless markets, from broadband technology
to Internet data systems, are simple: Customer demand has forced the company to act
just as the technology seems to have overcome many of the pitfalls that have stalled its
development in the past. True to its form, Cisco has acted through a combination of
acquisitions, partnerships and potentially savvy market development.

Cisco plans to detail its ambitions for the "fixed" wireless market later today as part of an
annual update for the financial and industry analyst community. The nascent niche,
comprised of pizza-size dishes that can transmit data at a high rate in congested areas,
has provoked increased interest from Cisco. It plans to share its technology with third
parties in order to spur the market forward.

Companies such as Cisco, along with competitors like Nortel Networks, Lucent
Technologies, Nokia and Ericsson, among others, are salivating at various wireless
opportunities. They're all finding that the number of people who want to be connected to a
private network or the Internet outstrips the reach of current land-based networking
technologies, such as cable, digitized copper phone lines or private connections run over a
backbone network.

In Cisco's case, wireless technology is just another option
in a strategy to provide "soup to nuts" networks for its
corporate, Internet service provider (ISP) and
telecommunications carrier customers.

"Wireless is a market we know we have to play in and we're
moving forward with that," said John Shantz, vice president
of market development at Cisco and acting general
manager of the company's fixed/mobile wireless unit.

Added one analyst: "For Cisco, if they see there's a sudden
demand for a technology, they have to make a move," said
John Armstrong of market researcher Dataquest.

Cisco has filled holes in its strategy through a variety of
means. Earlier this year, the company announced a broad
alliance with Motorola to develop a series of Net-based
technologies for wireless phones and other untethered
devices. That work continues, with a proposed set of
technology specifications in the hands of a select few
Cisco customers, according to executives.

The companies pledged to invest up to $1 billion to develop a new set of Net-based
wireless technologies. As part of the effort, Cisco and Motorola will open a regional
integration center later today in London so that customers can be trained on the potential
for the new wireless tools. Others are planned for Dallas, San Jose, Calif. and Tokyo.

Cisco's work with Motorola does not stop with traditional cellular wireless systems,
however. In June, Cisco and Motorola announced the purchase of Bosch Telecom's
broadband fixed wireless assets. Through that deal, a new firm, SpectraPoint Wireless,
was formed.

"Our view is that broadband as a competitive access play is going to be a very large
market worldwide," said Shantz. "Our relationship with Motorola is positive and continues
to broaden. [The market] is developing at a pace that's a little slower than developing
products for the Internet."

The 1998 acquisition of Clarity Wireless formed the basis for the company's effort in
October of this year to spur adoption of fixed wireless technology through a new standard.
The company enlisted third parties such as Motorola, Texas Instruments and KPMG,
among others, to build components or provide services based on the technology.

This marks Cisco's most ambitious bid to take a previously esoteric technology and try to
feed to it to a broader audience of network equipment customers. Though fixed wireless
systems have not made a dent of any significance in data networking, Internet growth and
a thirst for connections have brought formerly discounted options back to the fore.

"The technology is now absolutely proven to work," said Greg Raleigh, director of wireless
engineering at Cisco. "That's why we think we can really drive this forward."

Aironet Wireless Communications, a provider of wireless equipment for departmental local
networks, or LANs, was plucked by Cisco last month for $800 million, capping the
company's wireless moves for the year.

As evidenced by Cisco's patchwork entry into the wireless business, the technology will
primarily be used to give the company the means to build a more versatile network for its
customer base.

"The wireless data market is still a niche market," said Dataquest's Armstrong. "When it
comes to niche technology, Cisco is not a leader, it's a follower.

"They certainly don't want to be in a position where they have a gap in their product
portfolio," he said. "That's not their style."



To: Boplicity who wrote (52141)12/1/1999 10:19:00 AM
From: CDMQ  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
CDMA's fans gather to hail a technology

By Mike Drummond
STAFF WRITER

December 1, 1999

SAN FRANCISCO -- All the usual suspects have gathered here for the fourth annual
CDMA America's Congress, a wireless communications conference where industry
movers and shakers are celebrating the growing adoption of a technology some said
would never work.

The conference serves as another forum for industry players to rub their temples and
gauge demand for high-speed wireless Internet access, phones that deliver data
services as seamlessly as voice, and a world where mobile devices talk fluently to each
other using the mother tongue of "code division multiple access" or CDMA -- wireless
technology Qualcomm commercialized 10 years ago.

Sharing space on a small exhibit floor are Samsung from Korea, Nokia from Finland,
Alcatel from France. San Diego-based NeoPoint is handing out its flagship NeoPoint
1000 phone for three days of free use.

There's one conspicuous standout from Sweden that has turned heads. Ericsson, the
world's third-largest phone maker and a long-time critic of CDMA, is making its debut
appearance amid a strained detente with Qualcomm.

"I never thought I'd see the day when Ericsson is a sponsor at a CDMA Congress,"
said Perry LaForge, executive director of the CDMA Development Group, an umbrella
trade organization. "And we welcome them."

The Swedish giant's presence signals the maturity of CDMA, a wireless transmission
technology that will boast more than 50 million subscribers by year's end, LaForge said.
Yet Ericsson's presence also is a reminder that there's still not peace in the CDMA
universe.

For years, Ericsson dismissed CDMA, only to turn an about-face earlier this year when
it bought Qualcomm's infrastructure division for a reported $250 million. The division
makes networking equipment that keep cell phone calls connected.

The company's entry into the CDMA market paved the way for greater global
acceptance of the technology use in future generations of wireless networks and
devices. Industry observers hailed the sale -- part of a sweeping patent settlement with
Qualcomm -- as the spark that ignited CDMA as the world's fastest-growing wireless
technology, and the catapult that lofted Qualcomm's stock this year.

Ericsson is now disputing the price of the infrastructure division. While officials from
both companies decline to discuss the dispute -- both are trying to settle the issue out
of court -- Ericsson clearly feels slighted.

For one, Ericsson officials say Qualcomm's networking equipment was "sub-par,"
echoing the name-calling of the not-too-distant past.

"A lot of our focus has been on getting existing customers happy with their (CDMA)
networks," said Gwenn Larsson, director of technology and strategic marketing for
Ericsson. "They are running on sub-par software releases.

"It's hard for them to stomach the poor performance of their networks," Larsson added.

Larsson worked for Qualcomm and moved to Ericsson as part of the sale.

Qualcomm, citing the ongoing dispute, declined to give a rejoinder. Meanwhile,
Ericsson, which now has a major research and development presence in San Diego, is
ramping up new lines of CDMA-based phones. The first ones, "low cost" models, will
be available by next summer and will feature micro-Web browsers, Larsson said.

Indeed, those types of capabilities, coupled with faster wireless Internet access, are
what the industry hopes will drive consumer and business demand. One indication that
wireless Internet access will be hot is the presence of Microsoft at this year's event.

Thomas Koll, Microsoft's vice president of Network Solutions Group, was the
conference's first keynote speaker. He made clear that the company has changed its
mission statement.

The Redmond, Wash., company's charter used to be, "A computer on every desk and in
every home." Now, it's "Empower people through great software, anytime, any place
and on any device," Koll said.

And there are tangible signals Microsoft is committed to wireless. Many analysts
believe it was Microsoft that forced the removal of John Major as chief executive of
Wireless Knowledge, the San Diego-based joint venture between Microsoft and
Qualcomm. Eric Schultz, formerly of Microsoft, is now at the helm.

Wireless Knowledge is trying to work the bugs out of a service that is supposed to
deliver corporate e-mail, calendar and other meat-and-potatoes business information to
any type of mobile device. Given the warm applause after Koll's address, it appears
many in the wireless world welcome Microsoft to the CDMA camp.

What about Ericsson?

"I think people are excited to have Ericsson here as a friend rather than a foe," Larsson
said. "We thought it might be uncomfortable at first. But there are so many of us from
Qualcomm that I think that made it pretty easy."

Copyright 1999 Union-Tribune Publishing Co.