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Technology Stocks : Ascend Communications-News Only!!! (ASND) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Gary Korn who wrote (762)12/16/1997 8:18:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1629
 
Ascend's MAX TNT WAN Access Switch Wins Top Honors From Data Communications Magazine Business Wire - December 16, 1997 08:00 %ASCEND-COMMUNICATIONS ASND %CALIFORNIA %COMED %COMPUTERS %ELECTRONICS %TELECOMMUNICATIONS %INTERACTIVE %MULTIMEDIA %INTERNET %PRODUCT V%BW P%BW ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Jump to first matched term ALAMEDA, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 16, 1997--Ascend Communications, Inc., (NASDAQ:ASND) announced today that its MAX TNT carrier-class WAN access switch has earned the Tester's Choice award from Data Communications magazine in the largest public evaluation of remote access server (RAS) technology ever conducted. "With 672 ports per (system), Ascend's MAX TNT is one of the biggest and best RASs available," said the magazine. Also evaluated for the article, which appears in the magazine's December issue, were products from Bay Networks Inc., Cisco Systems Inc., Multi-Tech Systems Inc., RAScom Inc., Shiva Corp., and 3Com Corp. "We are pleased to be recognized by Data Communications as a Tester's Choice for Remote Access products," said Kurt Bauer, vice president, access product management, at Ascend. "Ascend created the high-end RAS product class with the MAX TNT, and we continue to provide the broadest feature set in the industry while delivering excellent performance. The tests conducted by Data Communications only scratched the surface of the MAX TNT capabilities." Right from the start, the MAX TNT displayed its high-performance capabilities. The magazine noted that "...the box that pioneered the big RAS market...(was)...one of the easiest units to set up...too many boxes bury key WAN configuration parameters deep inside various menus...One notable exception is Ascend's MAX TNT, which is as close to a plug-and-play box as any we tested." The MAX TNT was also the easiest to monitor, "especially when using the vendor's NavisAccess management software. This tool shows at a glance which calls are coming in on which T1s, how many calls the unit is fielding all told, and many other parameters." MAX TNT Scores High for Configuration, Scalability The MAX TNT also scored well for scalability. The magazine built a test bed with 200 33.6Kbps modems, and took measurements for 1, 50, 100, and 200 dial-up users. The magazine found that, "The most difficult part of the test -- for almost all RASs -- was sustaining 200 simultaneous calls. Ascend's MAX TNT had the fewest problems: Clients simply made the calls and we offered the test data. Other vendors had all sorts of configuration problems, ranging from malfunctioning serial cards to routing loops to faulty Radius (remote authentication dial-in user service) routines." The AS5300 from Cisco, for example, required "three chassis to handle our 200 callers," but also "was outperformed by other devices in our test," the magazine said. Highest Capacity and Functionality in Industry Ascend's MAX TNT is capable of providing a much higher level of capacity and functionality than Data Communications tested for. The industry's highest capacity carrier-class WAN access switch, the MAX TNT can scale up to 720 channels (for E7 modules) and support high-volume, multiservice access requirements, including analog, ISDN, Frame Relay, and xDSL traffic and can concentrate VPNs, dial-up and dedicated traffic in a single platform. About Ascend Communications Ascend Communications, Inc. develops, manufactures and sells wide area networking solutions for telecommunications carriers, Internet service providers and corporate customers worldwide. For more information about Ascend and its products, please visit the Ascend web site at www.ascend.com, or send email to info@ascend.com Ascend is headquartered at One Ascend Plaza, 1701 Harbor Bay Parkway, Alameda, CA 94502-3002. Phone 800/ASCEND4; Fax 510/747-2300. CONTACT: Gallagher PR Kevin Gallagher, 510/743-7830



To: Gary Korn who wrote (762)12/16/1997 12:50:00 PM
From: Maverick  Respond to of 1629
 
Bell Atlantic deployed ASND's 36 CBX 500 Multiservice ATM switches which were introduced in 4Q97 {very quick adoption]
Bell Atlantic extends ATM throughout
territory
New York, New England to get their first RBOC ATM
offering.

By David Rohde
Network World, 12/15/97

Washington, D.C. - Shortly after the new year, Bell Atlantic
Corp. is planning to announce the introduction of ATM service
throughout the former NYNEX Corp. territory of New York and
New England.

At the same time, Bell Atlantic officials last week confirmed that
the original Bell Atlantic states
in the mid-Atlantic U.S. will see an expansion of their existing
intrastate ATM service. The ATM service, introduced about a
year ago, will include an interstate offering.

The impending move is backed by a rollout of some 36 Cascade
CBX 500 Multiservice ATM switches from Ascend
Communications, Inc. over Bell Atlantic's vast region. The
in-crease in area was created by the Bell Atlantic/NYNEX
merger completed last August. Bell Atlantic recently installed five
Cascade switches in Manhattan, three in the Boston area and
others throughout New England to prepare for the service.


According to a tariff filing with the Federal Communications
Commission, Bell Atlantic will employ a mileage-sensitive pricing
scheme, enabling users in large Northeast cities to save money over equivalent private lines
if they are located close to one of the Cascade switches.


For a T-3 connection, including the access line and port on the carrier switch, users will pay
$1,600 per month for sites essentially colocated with the Bell Atlantic switch. Sites located
within two miles will cost $2,200 per month, and within 16 miles sites will cost up to $4,900
per month. Virtual channel connections among sites will cost more (see sidebar).

By contrast, users in the original Bell Atlantic region now pay a flat $3,700 per month for the
ATM User-to-Network Interface (UNI), including the port connection, regardless of
mileage. T-1 access, priced at less than $1,000 per month, initially will be available only in
the former NYNEX states.



To: Gary Korn who wrote (762)12/16/1997 12:55:00 PM
From: Maverick  Respond to of 1629
 
Bell Atlantic deployed 36 ASND's Multiservice CBX 500's, Part II
In another key difference, former NYNEX customers will enjoy a rudimentary circuit
prioritization scheme not available in the original Bell Atlantic territory. The northern states
will get a choice of three ATM service classes: constant bit rate traffic that emulates a
private line, delay-prone variable bit rate (VBR) for LAN interconnection traffic and Priority
VBR for delay-sensitive traffic such as imaging or MPEG2 video applications. The original
Bell Atlantic states do not yet have the choice of Priority VBR.

''Because we're later to the market, we have the benefit of conforming to the latest ATM
[offerings],'' said Jim Lowrie, the Boston-based ATM product manager for Bell
Atlantic-North
. But the original Bell Atlantic states are slated to receive the features
sometime in 1998,
said Evelyn Gaines, a Bell Atlantic fast-packet product manager in Arlington, Va. In
addition,Bell Atlantic is slated to offer frame relay-to-ATM interworking in the third quarter
of 1998.

With an identical Cascade switch platform in place, over the next year the two halves of Bell
Atlantic will attempt to unify all their features
[another batch of Multiservice CBX 500's will be purchased]. And at least until Bell Atlantic receives
long-distance authority, Bell Atlantic-South will use private Network-to-Network
Interfaces with other ATM carriers to begin providing interstate service that crosses the
regional Bell operating company's serving boundaries, Gaines said.

Bell Atlantic concedes ATM service will not be economically viable in many areas for a while.
A UNI surcharge for users located over 16 miles from the nearest Bell Atlantic switch would
make the service cost-prohibitive for users in upstate New York, Rhode Island and Vermont,
for example.

However, Bell Atlantic is working on creating additional ATM service points at central offices
without the Cascade switch, Lowrie said.



To: Gary Korn who wrote (762)12/16/1997 2:34:00 PM
From: Maverick  Respond to of 1629
 
Infonet service links ISDN/FR nets
By Tim Greene of Network World
The new service called DialXpress Virtual Enterprise, anables customer sites connected to Infonet's public packet nw via ISDN to reach other customer sites connected by a FR line. It is available in 46 countries.
If a remote corp. site is connected to the nw for less than 4 hrs per day, it costs less to use ISDN than a FR link for that site, according to Infonet.
Infonet previously offered an ISDN remote access service that let users dial out to ISDN-connected sites over Infonet packet nw. But users at ISDN-connected sites couldn't dial in over the Infonet nw to reach sites connected by FR.
Infonet uses a feature of ASND's MAX RA switches in the Infonet nw to signal ASDN's ISDN routers at remote sites to dial in. The destination can be a LAN connected to Infonet by a dedicated or dial-up connection. Infonet phone: 310-335-4700