Lucent Proxy Readies New Five-Nines FTTP Scheme 2004-06-09 17:18 (New York)
What's sure to be denigrated by at least some competitors as the "odd couple" of the fiber-to-the-premises (FTTP) market has begun to emerge from hiding - and it's the unlikely combination of Lucent [LU] technology and a tiny, virtually unknown outfit that lost a fortune trying to bring a CD copy-protection scheme to market. What's about to emerge is a product line based on technology developed by the fabled Bell Labs that promises 100 Mb/s switched Ethernet FTTP with five-nines reliability. The stuff looks to be first headed straight to Japan, for use in that country's massive FTTP build-out, although details of that deployment won't be disclosed publicly for some weeks yet. The tiny company in the odd couple is Amedia Networks [AANI]. The name is brand-spanking-new and, thus, unknown to the industry. Amedia legally changed its name May 25, and its ticker symbol changed three days later. Before that, it had been TTR Technologies, which had been working on music copy protection since 1994. According to SEC filings, the company burned through something like $35 million before giving up on the technology and selling it off to Macrovision [MVSN] for $5.5 million in cash a year ago. Macrovision also gave TTR/Amedia almost two million shares in the company it had bought for $4 million in January 2000. Reports are that the technology worked just fine, but it required CD manufacturers to modify their hardware, a fact that made it a tough sell. Little is known today as to what Macrovision's going to do with the technology. That left TTR/Amedia as a publicly traded shell with a fat bank account and no products. Rather than simply divvying up the cash among shareholders and calling it quits, TTR/Amedia went out looking for a new reason to be in business. Late last year, it hashed out a deal with Lucent - the deal was signed in early January - under which the company bought a license to develop and market a line of FTTP gear that had been in development at Bell Labs for years. It also gets non-exclusive rights to 20 Lucent patents covering the FTTP technology used in that hardware. Just how and why Lucent decided to turn over a product line it had spent an estimated tens of millions of dollars developing to TTR/Amedia remains a mystery.
Terms Of The Deal
The deal Lucent cut with what was then TTR/Amedia, however, is no mystery. Because TTR/Amedia is publicly traded, the details had to be disclosed in SEC filings. Basically, TTR/Amedia is paying Lucent $3 million, in dribs and drabs, for rights to the FTTP line. Lucent, which keeps rights to its technology in other markets but which has agreed not to compete with TTR/Amedia, also gets patent royalties. Even more lucrative for Amedia, the deal includes the right for the tiny company to use the Lucent trademark. Lucent also has an option to OEM or resell Amedia products, although it has not yet said if it will pick up on that opportunity. With the Lucent deal in hand, TTR/Amedia's top management, which essentially was all that was left of the entire company, has departed, and a new crew with hefty fiber-optics credentials is at the helm of Amedia. Leading that group is Frank Galuppo, the former president of Lucent's optical networking group, who thought that he had retired 15 months ago. Galuppo was lured out of retirement in March to take the helm at Amedia after the legendary "friend of a friend" made the right business connections. Galuppo, who tells Fiber Optics Forecast that while he was aware of the FTTP work going on at Bell Labs, he had no direct involvement in it, is gearing up for Amedia's first big splash as a FTTP vendor at this month's Supercomm in Chicago. What he's can talk about, but he can't ship yet, is a trio of products - those developed by Bell Labs - that when combined form a high-capacity FTTP system. The product line has been named QoStream, a name chosen "because we want to emphasize the quality of service," Galuppo says.
Massive Switch
The heart of the system is a massive gigabit Ethernet switch, which Bell Labs was developing under the code name Jaguar but which will go to market as the model CS1200. A fully configured version will be able to handle 120 Gb/s of data, and it can serve 50,000 homes. The switch won't actually be ready to go to market trials until sometime in the fall, Galuppo says. Amedia's deal with Lucent sets Sept. 30 as the target date for Lucent to have all development work on the CS1200 and other pieces of the QoStream line finished. The plan is, sometime in the late summer, to first finish up work on an aggregator switch, which has been code-named Polecat but slated for market as the AS5000. That widget will support 48 homes, and it can be placed as far as 50 kilometers away from the CS1200. Also due out in the late summer is a residential gateway that can be placed as far as 10 kilometers away from the AS5000 and that will deliver 100 Mb/s service to the home. The device will have both wired and wireless ports to reduce or eliminate the need for costly wiring in the home. Amedia has no plans to build a plant and to make the devices itself. Working prototypes were put together by the folks at Lucent. Amedia is out scouring the market for contract manufacturers right now. Initially, it is looking for contract manufacturers in the United States, with plans to move manufacturing overseas to lower cost plants sometime next year.
The Japanese Market
Some of those Bell Labs prototypes even seem to have made their way to Japan for evaluation by suppliers providing equipment for Japan's FTTH buildout. Galuppo says the formal announcement of a contract win is imminent. Like Centillium [CTLM], which is a chip house not a system house so the two companies don't compete head-on, he won't yet identify Amedia's Japanese partner or the scope of the deal. Galuppo is, of course, also hoping to sell the widgetry in the United States and in other world markets as quickly as possible, although he admits that 100 Mb/s FTTP in the United States is almost as rare as hen's teeth. Most U.S. FTTP service - what little there is of it - is in the 20 Mb/s range at best. In fact, there are only a few known places in America where 100 Mb/s service is delivered - so few that in just a couple of seconds Galuppo reeled off the locations from memory. What Amedia's counting on as its main sales pitch is an architecture it calls "Ethernet Switched Optical Networks," or ESON - a term it coined. The term is meant to contrast with industry-standard passive optical networks (PON) as well as with other FTTP technology choices like hybrid fiber-coax (HFC) and digital subscriber loop (DSL). The way Galuppo explains it, ESON is a point-to-point system, so the end user only gets the precise broadband content that he wants. In contrast, he denigrates FTTP PON systems as broadcasting "everything to everyone," and the end user filters out just the content he wants. The ESON technology, he says, makes it possible "to manage each and every flow, per user, per application, for thousands of flows for each card" in the CS1200. That means that, for instance, a VoIP bitstream can be given priority, which is a key consideration if VoIP telephony is to have the same type of five-nines QoS as standard switched telephony. Another touch is that the QoStream hardware is hardened for outside plant use, chimes in Bill Zakowski, vice president of business development. That eliminates the need for things like controlled environmental cooling. Put another way, Polecat can sit on a telephone pole. Amedia argues that, in competing systems, the aggregator needs environmental control, an issue that causes carriers capex costs to escalate.
The Competition
Basically, Galuppo says, he's out to eat the lunch of such PON competitors as World Wide Packets and Allied Telesyn. (Editor's note: World Wide Packets has told Fiber Optics Forecast it's going to have more than a little to say about Amedia in return in another week or so. Food fight!) One advantage Amedia has over those competitors, he says, is that Amedia jumped into the game with a product that's just about ready for market. "We're not like many startups that built the team that built the product. We're entering the selling cycle with very low financial commitments to developing the product." He estimates, "World Wide Packets is up to $115 million" spent developing its products. "How much did Lucent spend?" he continues - not naming a figure (although, as a former top Lucent executive, he just might know the number). In contrast, Amedia's investment is only the $3 million it's paying Lucent. With that payment accounted for, Amedia is left with $1.5 million in the bank for marketing and, while it technically shows a massive shareholder deficit on the books left over from its CD copy- protection days, the company doesn't have massive debt. Amedia, in its SEC filings, also revealed it is working on an offering to raise another $3 million to fund marketing. Amedia also doesn't have much of a payroll to worry about. Right now, the company has only eight direct employees, Galuppo says, with just about all corporate tasks outsourced. He calls the eight-man figure "deceptive," however, because it doesn't include the 20-man development staff at Bell Labs still working on the products. Indeed, those folks are working down the hall from Galuppo. As part of the deal, Lucent even is housing Amedia, albeit on a temporary basis, in a Bell Labs facility in Holmdel, N.J. Eventually, Galuppo says, the company will find a home of its own, and the jobs will start migrating into Amedia. Whether any of the Bell Labs folks currently working on the FTTP hardware will change employers is not clear. The plan is to grow the company to between 40 and 50 people by this time next year, he says. >>Frank Galuppo, Bill Zakowski, Amedia Networks, 732/949.2350<<
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