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Technology Stocks : All About Sun Microsystems -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: The Ox who wrote (23776)12/2/1999 8:12:00 AM
From: John Carragher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 64865
 
todays wall street journal
December 2, 1999

Lucent to Purchase $500 Million
Of Sun Microsystems Servers

By DAVID P. HAMILTON and STEPHANIE N. MEHTA
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Lucent Technologies Inc. agreed to purchase $500 million of computer
servers from Sun Microsystems Inc., part of a broader effort between the
two companies to speed the convergence of telecommunications and
computer-networking equipment.

Under the agreement, Lucent will base its wireless-network architecture,
called Flexent, on a new generation of Sun's low-end Netra servers.
Lucent helped Sun establish the specifications for the new Netra servers,
which haven't yet been released, and has agreed to buy at least $500
million of the new machines over the next seven years.

In addition, Lucent and Sun have agreed to jointly develop hardware,
software and service "bundles" intended to help businesses quickly start up
electronic commerce. Such bundles will be sold by Lucent and consist of
software from both Lucent and the Sun-Netscape Alliance, an
e-commerce software venture of Sun and America Online Inc.

Lucent, based in Murray Hill, N.J., also plans to deploy some of its
network software on Sun servers and will work together with Sun to
develop technology that would make it possible to connect servers directly
to optical communications networks. Today, most servers aren't capable
of directly handling the high-speed data that flow across optical networks
and instead generally use slower streams of data that have been converted
into electrical form.

The Lucent deal is another sign of Sun's
continued strength in the server market. It also
illustrates how computer makers such as Sun
have targeted telecommunications networks,
hoping to replace dedicated
telecommunications switches with high-performance, general-purpose
servers.

The partnership could also bolster Lucent's presence in the competitive
market for enterprise data networking. The company already sells
corporate phone systems and some networking gear to corporate clients.
For the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, revenue in its business-communications
unit rose only 5%; overall revenue for the fiscal year rose 20%.

Richard McGinn, Lucent's chairman and chief executive officer, said the
collaboration is going after fast-growing parts of the enterprise and carrier
space, such as gear to revamp wireless networks. "All the segments are
growing north of 20% a year," he said.