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Technology Stocks : Nortel Networks (NT) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: peggylynn who wrote (6668)9/1/2000 8:18:58 PM
From: Kenneth E. Phillipps  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 14638
 
Nortel Discloses Terabit Router Plans

DENVER — A top executive at Nortel Networks Corp. (NYSE/TSE: NT) moved to squash rumors that
the optical networking giant is set to buy a terabit router vendor, as he released fresh intelligence
about Nortel’s own in-house router development program, at the NFOEC show in Denver this week.

In an interview with Light Reading, Don Smith, president of Nortel's optical Internet division, denied
that his company needs to buy a router vendor in order to plug the IP routing hole in its current
product line. “We’ve been dealing with data for a hell of a long time,” he said.

Smith went on to talk about Nortel’s own terabit router, currently under development, called the
Optera Packet Core. Nortel announced that it was working on the product last September, but details
were scanty. Smith filled in some of the blanks, saying that the Optera router has actually been in
development for four years, and that Nortel has filed 45 patents related to the product. He also
claimed that Nortel has successfully tested the device’s ASICs, and that it has lined up the first
customers for the product -- although he declined to name names. The product is set to ship in the
first half of 2001.

Smith went on to reveal what may be the product’s most significant differentiator: the ability to
support distributed routing, whereby multiple routers located in different racks in an equipment
room, or even different geographical locations, act as a single routing device. Such “virtual routing”
technology has the potential to deliver big performance increases, while at the same time reducing
service provider operating costs.

Other terabit router companies, most particularly Pluris Inc., are working on the same capability (see
Pluris Is Back ). But Smith claims Nortel is ahead of the game: “Show me someone who can actually
do this; [our competitors] don’t have the ASICs, the software, the patents." The Optera Packet Core
product comprises hardware and software developed by Nortel engineers, as well as some software
that has been “re-vectored” from the Versalar product, Smith added.

The revelations cast a new light on the nature of Nortel’s reseller agreement with terabit router
vendor Juniper Networks Inc. (Nasdaq: JNPR) (see Juniper-Nortel "Alliance" Gives Pause ). There has
been speculation that the reseller deal might be a precursor to a mondo acquisition of Juniper by
Nortel. Smith’s comments suggest that it’s simply a stopgap until its own product is ready to ship.

Nortel desperately needs to hit a router home run. The Versalar products it acquired when it bought
Bay Networks have sunk like a big, heavy stone -- and its lack of carrier-class IP routing technology
represents the single weakest link in its product portfolio.

-- Stephen Saunders, US editor, Light Reading lightreading.com

lightreading.com



To: peggylynn who wrote (6668)9/5/2000 6:04:11 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 14638
 
I've owned NT since it took over Bay Networks. I've added to my position since then. Since NT has done so well, I have not followed the press releases, I am embarrassed to say.

Why does NT want to spin off the optical components unit? I thought their optical business was a tremendous plus for the company.

Mephisto