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


To: George Dawson who wrote (3090)4/14/2001 7:34:08 PM
From: David A. Lethe  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 4808
 
The typical applications where QoS for FC-based disk would be of use are video streaming, high OLTP, and backup/recovery scenarios. A SSP would also make use of it for provisioning bandwidth by type of application and customer.

On security, bringing IP into the mix will allow for creating VLANS, and data encryption, authentication technology (such as kerberos). This technology is all off-the-shelf, so by attaching storage to switches, then iSCSI routers & HBAs, it is easy. You don't gain security by merely attaching the SAN to any IP network, you have to attach to a secure IP network where these things are in place.

As for what you will see in 6-12 months, I won't comment on specifics, as I am on non-disclosure with many SAN, NAS, and FC switch and RAID subsystem manufacturers (probably everybody you invest in). I'll be glad to provide my insight from the perspective of somebody in the industry, as well as an investor, and answer technical or marketing questions on what is good or bad and why.

BTW, a pleasure to exchange email with an investor who takes the time to understand the industry as much as you do.



To: George Dawson who wrote (3090)4/14/2001 11:02:27 PM
From: J Fieb  Respond to of 4808
 
Douglas N., Just a note from many of us hoping that you are
Ok, we miss you at times like this....for those that think CSCO can't screw anything up read this. They used this slowdown to dump some trash onto the info highway.

The Monterey Incident
By Vishesh Kumar

It's been said that most acquisitions don't work. But with more than 70 acquisitions already, Cisco Systems has made gobbling up promising technologies and teams a crucial cornerstone of its strategy. What Cisco couldn't build, it has bought.

That's why Cisco's announcement last week that it would discontinue its Wavelength 15900, a core optical router it picked up through its acquisition of Monterey Networks, came as such a surprise. But the news should have been anything but shocking. Sources say the router was large and cumbersome with low port density, meaning that it didn't provide much speed and bandwidth for the amount of space it occupied.

Cisco's announcement of the $500 million Monterey purchase came on the same day (Aug. 26, 1999) that it bought Cerent for $6.9 billion in Cisco stock, the highest amount ever paid for a privately held company. While the Cerent switch, a metro SONET product, is one of Cisco's most successful offerings, the Monterey acquisition is the highest-profile belly flop in its acquisition strategy so far.

"It was the first to go bust so prominently and obviously in a market Cisco was trying so hard to get into," said Richard Shannon, an analyst at Epoch Partners. "It certainly highlights the risks involved with acquisitions, even though Cisco does it better than anybody else."

Rather than say its router wasn't up to par, Cisco claimed instead that the market wasn't there yet for the product. But analysts point out that other companies have had success in the high-end optical router market, and it was poor design that was responsible for the lack of sales.

"I personally don't believe Cisco's statement that there isn't a market, because companies like Ciena and Tellium have found a lot of success there," said Shannon.

"The product just wasn't making its way to carriers," said Michael Ching, an analyst at Merrill Lynch. "Perhaps if Cisco was in a more robust growth environment, it would have given it longer. But in this environment, you have to cut your losses and move on."

"Ciena is doing just fine there. The simple reality is that they bought a company that built a box that wasn't as good as Ciena's. It just didn't gain the traction," said Steve Kamman, executive director of networking and Internet infrastructure at CIBC World Markets.

In fact, Cisco had shipped the 15900 to just one customer.

Cisco's announcement is significant because in discontinuing the 15900, Cisco jumped out of a market that analysts feel is on its way, but it doesn't mean that Cisco will not go the acquisition route again. In fact, the company might try again in the high-end optical router market. And despite the heat Cisco is feeling over its recent failure, its overall track record is still great.

"This isn't a dishonor. Not all products are going to win," said Kamman. And while Cisco's currency has slipped enormously since its peak, so have the valuations of companies in the optical networking space.

"Its all relative. Cisco's currency is down, but there are so many companies in the space that have gotten funding. There is no way that even 5 or 10 percent will be able to survive. There are so many companies that do the same thing, and if Cisco won't buy them, they are out. It's between a low valuation and no valuation," said Shannon. "Cisco can still call the shots."

Kamman believes it's likely that Cisco will try to buy back into the high-end market. "If they continue to work on this integrated end-to-end strategy, they have no choice but to develop a switch." said Kamman, citing switch makers like publicly traded Sycamore Networks and venture-backed Tellium and Calient Networks as possible targets. "For privately held companies, it depends on whether they can get a higher valuation selling to Cisco or through an IPO."

But private companies have little access to the public markets right now. Tellium, for instance, has been stuck in IPO registration since the markets collapsed. "If we got an offer from Cisco, we would definitely take it to our shareholders," said Charles Corbalis, president and CEO of Calient.

But a new acquisition probably would not happen immediately. For one thing, Cisco is busy sorting out its own affairs and may not be up to absorbing another company.

Cisco is also well off its highs, and analysts say the stock is still expensive and has rough waters ahead. "We believe Cisco has significant downside potential based on valuation. We are significantly lowering estimates based on an increasingly worse outlook," wrote Paul Johnson, an analyst at Robertson Stephens, in a report. Cisco closed Wednesday at $17.40, down 77 percent from its 52-week high of $76.

"Investors and management want to focus on the internal problems. The company is seeing its first quarter of sequential decline, and right now its about the fundamentals," Ching said. "But the Monterey incident isn't going to discourage Cisco from acquiring."

Shannon pointed to another problem. "They could definitely buy into the space again," he said. "But it would look bad right now because they just said there was no market there."

There was some update on WDM in Europe....

RHK Study Results: Nortel, Lucent, and Alcatel Capture Top Market Share Positions in the European DWDM Equipment Market
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 11, 2001--New market share data released this week by telecom market research firm RHK Inc., shows shipments of WDM equipment for the European market in 2000 year-end were led by Nortel with a 31% market share, followed by Lucent at 19%, Alcatel at 17% and Ciena at 16%. Europe's continued pan-European network build-outs stemming from deregulation and increased global connectivity resulted in the WDM market climbing to $1.745 billion in 2000, more than doubling 1999 shipments.

``Last year was a milestone year for Europe with 80% of the pan-European pure-play operators completing network build-outs,'' commented RHK Director of European Optical Transport, Stephane Teral. ``As a result, the market for WDM equipment more than doubled in 2000.'' He adds, ``In 2001, we expect to see a greater concentration on network expansion by incumbent PTTs and an increase in global connectivity through transoceanic links.''

RHK's findings show Nortel captured the number one position in Europe, displacing Ciena. Nortel increased its market share from 23% in 1999 to 31% in 2000. Its success was also driven by the combination of STM-64 MS-SPRings topology, integrated DWDM/SDH systems pan-European pure-play build-outs. Lucent further enhanced its number two position in 2000, growing from 17% to 19%, by leveraging its strong relationship with Deutsche Telekom, by demonstrating solid 40 Gbps capabilities for future systems, and providing customers with attractive financing packages. Alcatel, with a 17% share, up from 13% in 1999, secured its position by building a broad customer base and implementing a global approach to undersea transport.

Ciena, the number one supplier at 35% in 1999, saw its market share reduced to 16%. Although Ciena's share decreased, its revenues almost doubled with the success of its high-channel count DWDM system, metro core equipment, strong customer support and metro access system.

Marconi increased its position from 2% in 1999, up to 6% in 2000, as a result of expanding its geographic coverage through its acquisition of Bosch and Nokia transmission groups, and creating a clear product roadmap to 40 Gbps. Sycamore, Siemens and others followed with a combined 11% of the market.

RHKs European WDM & Optical Networks Service covers the role of WDM systems in Europe. RHK analysis covers the fifteen member nations of the European Union (EU) and five non-EU states: the Czech Republic, Norway, Poland, Hungary and Switzerland. RHK tracks and analyzes the market, technologies, and key vendors and service providers in this space. For more information on European WDM & Optical Networks or for complete service offerings please contact Mike Mahan at 650/737-9600 x233.



To: George Dawson who wrote (3090)4/15/2001 3:52:56 PM
From: J Fieb  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4808
 
GD, Was hoping to see something about the E-port standard this month. If you come across anything let us know.

NAB is coming up in April...

1/17/2000, Burbank, CA - Leitch Technology Corporation (TSE:LTV)—a leading provider of high quality digital video and audio solutions to the broadcasting, telecommunications, cable and Internet industries—today announced that it has reduced storage cost and more than doubled storage capacity for its VR400™ and VR300™ series video servers with the introduction of 50GB Fibre Channel drives.
Leitch VR400™ and VR300™ server systems with 50GB drives are now available for purchase. The new FCR-302 disk arrays hold ten 50GB Fibre Channel disk drives. Combined with Fibre Channel and Leitch's exclusive RAIDsoft™ drive management system, these drives expand capacity to over three terabytes while giving multiple channels and users access to all video. Customers can now realize an immediate reduction in the cost of storage from (U.S.)$183.50 per Gigabyte for earlier drives to (U.S.)$95 per Gigabyte for the new drives.

"Leitch's new drives—the only 50GB drives currently used in a Fibre Channel storage area network—represent Leitch's most cost effective storage area network to date," says Nathan Simmons, Leitch Product Manager for VR servers. "As the leader in and first to offer Fibre Channel storage area network technology for servers, Leitch offers customers unprecedented performance and flexibility in its VR servers." Possible configurations range from small 2-channel commercial insertion to over 30-channel news, editing, program play-out and media asset management systems.

Leitch Technology Corporation provides leading-edge solutions to store, switch, distribute, convert, and otherwise process high-quality audio and video signals. Applications for Leitch products span the broadcast, telco, cable, post production, internet, and business-to-business markets. Leitch is headquartered in Toronto, ON, Canada with other key offices in Virginia, California, the United Kingdom, Brazil, Japan, Hong Kong, and Australia. Leitch's VR Server customers include CNN, Canal+, TeleMadrid, CITY-TV, and CBS NewsPath News.