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Technology Stocks : Son of SAN - Storage Networking Technologies -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: J Fieb who wrote (2454)11/21/2000 4:06:29 PM
From: J Fieb  Respond to of 4808
 
Here is what QLGC and NT have done together recently..

QLogic and Nortel Networks Complete Testing to Enable Extension of Metropolitan Storage Area Networks

ALISO VIEJO, Calif., October 31, 2000 - QLogic Corp. (NASDAQ:QLGC), the leading SAN infrastructure provider, today announced that it has successfully completed joint testing between its Fibre Channel storage area network (SAN) components and Nortel Networks* metropolitan-area fiber optic transport technology. The testing demonstrates the compatibility of QLogic’s QLA2200 Series Fibre Channel host adapters and SANbox switches with Nortel Networks OPTera* Metro 5200 Multiservice Platform and SAN products from other leading vendors.

Nortel Networks OPTera 5200 enables storage service providers (SSPs) to connect Fibre Channel SANs across distances up to and beyond 100 km, making “Metropolitan SANs” possible. Using dense wave division multiplexing (DWDM), OPTera 5200 can aggregate up to 32 separate data channels over a single fibre and transmit this information over 100 km. This dramatic decrease in the cost of native rate Fibre Channel interconnection enables corporations’ SANs to be built seamlessly over metropolitan networks, and underpins the business models for new Storage Service Providers (SSP).

SSPs now have the bandwidth necessary at the right price to provide storage, backup, archive, and disk mirroring services for resource-strapped IT organizations. According to IDC, the SAN services market is projected to grow almost 120 percent (CAGR) from 1998 to 2003.

“The interoperability of our high-performance Local Internet solutions with storage networks allows enterprise customers to grow their SANs beyond the walls of individual buildings, maximizing the use of storage devices in different locations,” said Brian McFadden, vice president, Metro Optical Solutions, Nortel Networks. “We will continue to work with QLogic to build solutions that help enterprises make optimum use of their computing resources and protect their business operations and mission critical data.”

The interoperability testing - conducted jointly at each SAN provider’s facility - included protocol application and distance testing up to 100 kilometers, utilizing each company’s leading storage solutions. The testing process also included subjecting the interconnected equipment to stressful operating conditions and fiber connectivity disruptions.

“SAN interoperability is an extremely high priority for QLogic,” said Larry Fortmuller, vice president of marketing, QLogic Corporation. “QLogic is simplifying SAN testing and implementation by providing a single point of contact for end-to-end SAN components from the host adapter to the switch. We will continue to work closely with companies like Nortel Networks to unlock the full potential of SANs and metropolitan SANs.”

QLogic SAN products control the flow of data between storage systems, tape libraries and network servers. QLogic’s high-performance SANbox switches and QLA2100 Series and QLA2200 Series host adapters are leading solutions for Fibre Channel, the crucial technology that makes large data centers possible. By moving data at rates of up to a gigabit per second to hundreds of storage devices, Fibre Channel unleashes the power of SANs.

About QLogic
QLogic Corporation (NASDAQ:QLGC) is changing the way the world views Storage Area Networks (SANs), serving OEMs, VARs and system integrators with the broadest line of SAN infrastructure components in the industry. With over 15 years of enterprise storage experience, the company delivers a full range of Fibre Channel switches, PCI host bus adapters, controller silicon and management chips for systems and peripherals, as well as the QLogic Management Suite of SAN management software solutions. A member of the Nasdaq-100® Index, QLogic recently emerged on the Forbes 500 and Business Week 200 lists. QLogic is integrated in over 200 OEM solutions, including: AMI, Compaq, Dell, EMC, Fujitsu, Hitachi, HP, IBM, INRANGE, Iwill, MTI Technology Corp., Quantum, Raidtec, Siemens, Sun and Unisys. For more information about QLogic and its products, contact QLogic Corp., 26600 Laguna Hills Drive, Aliso Viejo, CA 92656; telephone: 800/662-4471 (sales); 949/389-6000 (corporate); fax: 949/389-6126; home page qlogic.com

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For instance, Fortmuller said that, in a matter of a few months, switches will go from 1.75 inches high to the size of a blade, and they will come integrated in larger systems.

"There is nothing sacred about having switches separate," he said. "Ultimately, switches can be deployed out into other equipment."

Are QLGC and NT going to put these blades into a WDM box like JW first talked about?



To: J Fieb who wrote (2454)11/22/2000 8:37:24 PM
From: D. K. G.  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 4808
 
Startups Ready Big SAN Switches
lightreading.com
Storage area networks (SANs) have become crucial to service providers who are seeking to manage huge amounts of content and hosted applications. But two startups say today's SAN products lack the capacity and performance carriers need. And they mean to make a killing delivering alternatives.

"This is a huge opportunity," says Thomas Z. Isakovich, founder and CEO of TrueSAN Networks Inc., one of these startups. The overall SAN market is forecast to reach $4.5 billion by 2003, he says, and "at least half" of that will go to carriers and other service providers buying SAN gear.

TrueSAN, which announced its first products in October, plans to finalize its second round of funding early in December. The round will add up to $25 million, Isakovich says, on top of an undisclosed amount already received. The company hopes for an IPO in 2001, he says. Backing is coming in equal portions from VCs, investment bankers, and unspecified "strategic partners."

Isakovich, a recent Stanford graduate, says TrueSAN's product, Paladin, is based on a SAN switch fabric built right into a server that supports distributed parallel processing. This approach, he claims, delivers an order of magnitude better capacity and performance than competing solutions from EMC Corp. (NYSE: EMC) and Network Appliance Inc. (Nasdaq: NTAP). It also allows TrueSAN to support network-attached storage as well as SANs. And it's scaleable: Customers pay for processors in add-on increments -- up to 128 can be supported in one platform.

TrueSAN's product features ATM (asynchronous transfer mode), gigabit Ethernet, Fibre Channel, and 16-channel WDM (wavelength-division multiplexing) connectivity -- the last via a module from Finisar Corp. (Nasdaq: FNSR). Optical connectivity is a must for the carrier market, Isakovich contends. And while EMC has optical connectivity too, it can't claim to have combined it with distributed parallel processing, he says.

Isn't TrueSAN, which has just 35 employees, afraid to challenge vendors like EMC, which has thousands? No, says Isakovich. "There's room for everyone. Look at how Alteon and Juniper went up against Cisco, Nortel, and Lucent. They succeeded by leveraging technology, early advantage, and engineering talent. And certainly Cisco didn't go out of business."

TrueSAN has another ace in the hole: It's cut an unusual support deal with IBM Corp. (NYSE: IBM), by which that vendor's Global Services arm will service TrueSAN accounts. "It was time-consuming to put this agreement in place, but it's going to be worth it," Isakovich says. "It means that if someone wants a SAN anywhere in the world, we can help deliver it." Also, he says, the deal with IBM gives TrueSAN the means to live up to a higher level of support than it otherwise could.

Whether TrueSAN succeeds in its mission remains to be seen. But at least one other startup has similar plans, confirming the attractiveness of the proposition. Cereva Networks Inc. is still in stealth mode and unwilling to talk much about its doings, although it acknowledges that it's on the verge of releasing its first product. Analysts and VCs confirm that this is a switch/server similar to the one TrueSAN has launched. (Jeff McCarthy, general partner at North Bridge, spilled some of the beans to Light Reading back in July: see Cereva ).

Cereva's got other things in common with TrueSAN. It's rumored to be going for more funding, after having gotten $66.5 million in funding from a slew of leading VCs, including Goldman Sachs & Co. (NYSE: GS), North Bridge Venture Partners, and Worldview Technology Partners. And the vendor acknowledges it will probably try to go public sometime next year.

Unlike TrueSAN, however, Cereva seems chary about competitors, citing them as a reason for its cagey approach to everything from press announcements to its Website, which was only recently revised from an extremely minimalist state that one company spokesperson said "helped make sure our competitors didn't take us too seriously."

But Cereva's having only mixed success keeping its secrets. "They're very quiet, but I'm told they've built an expensive, powerful storage system with very high-end technology, all of which they've created themselves," Isakovich says.

And "expensive" is the keyword for him. "Our business model is different from theirs in that we OEM our ASICs," he says. (Translation: TrueSAN's application-specific integrated circuits are custom-made by outside contractors.) That will enable him, he thinks, to charge significantly less for his product than Cereva.

-- Mary Jander, senior editor, Light Reading lightreading.com

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Do EMC and NTAP need to look in the rear view mirror for these guys? FNSR put up some good #'s, I like the fact GMs firmed up plus some nice revenue growth to boot. Don't know much about the 3 acquisitions. I hope to listen to the CC later this week.

Cheers,

dkg