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Technology Stocks : PairGain fundamentals -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Clam Clam who wrote (30)12/11/1997 3:12:00 PM
From: Moe Damghani  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 36
 
Is this why the stock went down today or not?

SOURCE: Westell Technologies

Lucent Technologies and Westell to Jointly Market and Sell ADSL Products

Westell's SuperVision broadband access platform to enable high-speed data from North America's most widely deployed Digital Loop Carrier Systems

AURORA, Ill., Dec. 11 /PRNewswire/ -- Westell Technologies (Nasdaq: WSTL - news) announced today that it has signed a joint marketing agreement with Lucent Technologies (NYSE: LU - news). Lucent will now begin marketing Westell's SuperVision(R) Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer (DSLAM) systems, including concentration shelves, line cards, mux cards, remote ADSL modems and network management systems, enabling telecommunications service providers to offer high-speed data over copper telephone wires.

Under the agreement, Lucent can market Westell's SuperVision broadband access platform. Westell's DSLAM systems will be commercially available in the first quarter of 1998. In addition, the agreement calls for both companies to market and sell Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) products developed by Westell for Lucent's SLC(R) Digital Loop Carrier Systems. The first ADSL enabled SLC Series systems are projected to be available in the fourth quarter of 1998. Today's announcement is the next step in an agreement announced earlier this year, when Lucent and Westell first agreed to integrate Westell's ADSL technology into Lucent's SLC Digital Loop Carrier systems.

Lucent's SLC-2000 and SLC Series 5 digital loop carriers are the most widely deployed systems in the United States. By combining SLC Systems ADSL-enabled channel units that interface with Westell's SuperVision ADSL modems, service providers with Lucent's SLC systems will be able to offer data service at rates up to eight megabits per second (Mbps) downstream with full rate-adaptive capabilities -- an increase of 200 times over today's raditional data rates using 28.8 kilobits per second (kbps) modems.

As part of the agreement, Westell will install and support the broadband equipment at the central office and remote modems at the customer premises. Financial terms and conditions of the contract were not disclosed.

Lucent Technologies may also use Westell-supplied AccessVision(R) element manager to provide full network management of each ADSL circuit. AccessVision is a scaleable, distributed Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) management system that provides a graphical interface to operators in a central management center. AccessVision's modular open architecture cost-effectively supports small networks but can accommodate network growth up to the hundreds of thousands of lines. AccessVision was specifically designed to manage large, dispersed, multi-product access networks.

''Lucent Technologies is continually looking for ways to help service providers maximize their investment in our digital loop carrier products so they can meet their customers' demand for higher bandwidth services,'' said Linda Manchester, Lucent's director of Access Solutions Strategy and Business Development. ''Integrating the Westell ADSL solution ensures that service providers will be able to offer high-speed ADSL from a SLC system, thereby avoiding the expense of installing an overlay network.''

The Lucent/Westell solution requires an ADSL line card and a Westell-developed mux card to be inserted into a SLC-2000 Access System Metallic Distribution Shelf or SLC Series 5 dual channel bank assembly. This creates a remote DSLAM inside the remote terminal cabinet. Each ADSL card provides two ADSL lines and integrated onboard Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS) splitters.

''This joint marketing agreement with Lucent is an expansion of our earlier development agreement and a major step forward in the commercial deployment of our DSLAM solution,'' said Marc Hafner, Westell's senior vice president, Business Development and Global Alliances. ''Westell's SuperVision broadband access platform will complement Lucent's SLC digital loop carrier systems, allowing both companies to launch a joint marketing effort that benefits our mutual customers.''

According to the Lucent/Westell marketing agreement, SuperVision will support the transmission of ATM cells from either a 155 Mbps (SONET/SDH) or 45 Mbps (DS3) ATM network interface to DSL line modules housed within Lucent's SLC remote terminal cabinets. The DS-3 signal from the SLC Remote Terminal is transported via a SONET FiberMux to the host system where it is combined with other DS-3 signals into an OC-3 signal. The OC-3 signal travels to the ATM Backbone Network.

Westell's SuperVision DSLAM is a flexible platform that serves as a single point of concentration for ADSL line cards located in the SLC Remote Terminal office. By consolidating individual DSL access line interfaces into a single high-speed interface to the switching network, service providers are spared the cost of fully deploying multimedia services such as high-speed Internet access, video-on-demand and remote LAN access. Westell's consolidation also reduces equipment costs, saves space and enhances availability by minimizing the potential points of failure in the network.

Lucent Technologies, headquartered in Murray Hill, N.J., designs, builds and delivers a wide range of public and private networks, communications systems and software, data networking systems, business telephone systems and microelectronic components. Bell Labs is the research and development arm for the company. For more information on Lucent Technologies, visit the company's web site at lucent.com.

Westell Technologies, Inc. is a holding company for Westell, Inc., Conference Plus, Inc. and Westell WorldWide Services, Inc. Westell, Inc. is a leading worldwide innovator and manufacturer of xDSL systems and telecommunications access products, with corporate headquarters in Aurora, Ill. Westell's xDSL products are currently in use or trial by many customers worldwide, including Ameritech, Bell Atlantic, Bell Canada, BT, GTE, MCI, Quebec Telephone, SBC, Saskatchewan Telephone, Telecom Italia, US West and leading Internet service providers. In addition to developing and manufacturing xDSL and non-DSL data and telecommunications products, Westell, Inc., has established technology relationships with leading telecommunication, software, computing and semiconductor companies such as Atlantech Technologies, ATML, DSC Communications, GlobeSpan, Lucent Technologies, Microsoft, Motorola, Texas Instruments and others.

Conference Plus, Inc. is a multi-point telecommunications service bureau specializing in audio teleconferencing, multi-point video conferencing, broadcast fax, and multimedia teleconference services. Westell WorldWide Services, Inc. provides engineering, installation and network management services to leading network providers as well as turn-key equipment and service solutions to enterprise customers and service providers. Additional information can be obtained by visiting Westell's Web site at westell.com.

SuperVision is a registered trademark of Westell Technologies, Inc. SLC is a registered trademark of Lucent Technologies.



To: Clam Clam who wrote (30)1/9/1998 4:05:00 PM
From: Bobo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 36
 
Clam Clam

You seem to have pretty good insight into Pairgain. Any change to "Pairgain making quarter but being close". What have you heard how PGFlex is doing. It has always seemed to be the growth engine for 98 as t1 commoditizes and adsl deployments get delayed.

Thanks,
Bobo