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To: username who wrote (45084)4/21/1998 11:23:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 61433
 
3Com Looks To Take Lead In New Voice-Data Market [ASND reference]
[Kinda bizarre article. Seems surprised that ASND would participate in this market. Duh!]

Date: 4/22/98
Author: Michele Hostetler

3Com Corp. will take a big step this summer in
its quest to become the top player in the
emerging voice-data network market.

It will release its first products from a key
partnership forged last year with Siemens AG.

Hopes are high for 3Com, the second-
largest seller of networking gear. Cisco
Systems Inc. is No. 1.

''Our fundamental strategy is leadership in
converged networks,'' said 3Com Chief
Executive Officer Eric Benhamou. ''The
whole company is aimed at that goal.''

Networks that transmit both data and voice
might soon be ready for center stage.
Analysts aren't convinced customers need
these products yet, but networking
companies are positioning for when they do.

Aside from Cisco, 3Com's major rivals in this
arena include two leaders in the voice field:
Northern Telecom Ltd. and Lucent
Technologies Inc.

In April, another rival emerged. Ascend
Communications Inc., a maker of networking
gear, said it's making voice-data products.


The market is so new that 3Com can quickly
dominate, Benhamou says.

''We're very excited about this (converged
network) trend because we think it will be the
major driving trend for the next couple of
years, perhaps longer,'' Benhamou said. ''It's
driven by fundamental economical cost
benefits.''

For customers, convergence cuts networking
costs and increases features. Instead of
separate voice and data lines connecting their
networked computers, a single line does
both. The converged network gives users
such features as the ability to check voice
mail through their PCs.


But 3Com's plans put it on a collision course
with an old adversary. Cisco, too, wants to
lead in voice-data. And CEO John Chambers
says Cisco is ahead of the game.

Benhamou disagrees. ''I think the rhetoric is
ahead of the reality,'' he said.

Analysts don't necessarily give the edge to
either networking company.

Lucent could be the one to beat, says George
Kelly, an analyst with Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter & Co. in New York. The maker of
telecom products has been moving fast into
the data field. One example: Last year it
bought modem maker Livingston Enterprises
Inc.

''I think what they're doing is cooking up a
strategy to make the industry take notice,''
Kelly said.

Meanwhile, the other leading networking
company, Bay Networks Inc., isn't moving
quickly into voice-data convergence.

''I don't think there's a very real change near
term,'' said David House, Bay's CEO.

House says the trend toward voice-data
convergence could hurt Bay in the long term if
it doesn't have such products, ''but it certainly
won't impact our business as it exists today.''

3Com's products made with Siemens include
a gateway - an entrance to and from a
network - that lets voice and video flow
between Internet Protocol networks and
telephone networks. IP is the Internet
language also used on internal corporate
networks, or intranets, which are based on
the Internet.

In addition, 3Com is developing a new
networking switch to help traffic move faster
on voice-data networks. It prioritizes
information and reserves needed bandwidth
for intensive video and graphics.

Large corporate customers are the first
market for voice-data networks. 3Com
partnered with Canada's Newbridge
Networks Corp. in January to boost 3Com's
sales to large corporate customers,
Newbridge's stronghold.

The alliance with Siemens is strategic, while
the Newbridge partnership is tactical, says
John Armstrong, an analyst with market
researcher Dataquest Inc.

But Newbridge customers could decide to
evaluate all networking firms, rather than
automatically go with 3Com, says Lee Doyle,
an analyst with International Data Corp.

Alliances may not send a strong enough
message to the large accounts, Doyle says. ''I
think 3Com is in a better position if they can
own their own products in that area rather
than (rely on) partnerships,'' he said.

3Com disagrees.

The Newbridge relationship ''is very
important for us,'' Benhamou said. ''It gives us
a great market share expansion opportunity.''

(C) Copyright 1998 Investors Business Daily,
Inc.
Metadata: COMS CSCO LU ASND BAY NNCSXF
I/3574 I/4890 E/IBD E/SN1 E/TECH



To: username who wrote (45084)4/21/1998 11:34:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 61433
 
Internet Access: The Next Generation Seminar [ASND attendance]
[borrowed from the excellent COMS thread]

An Industry Forum Sponsored by TranSwitch, in Santa Clara, CA
on Tuesday, May 12, 1998

transwitch.com

Register Now !!!

Internet access today can be loosely split between the predominantly dial-up access
used by residential subscribers and the ISDN, T1, and T3 connection services
utilized by businesses.

The continuing, dramatic increase in the use of the Internet coupled with emerging
technologies, portends major changes in Internet access. A variety of copper-loop
access technologies: HDSL, SDSL, ADSL, ADSL-Lite, VDSL, and others, along
with cable modem and wireless technologies holds a promise of low-cost, high-speed
Internet access for users.

In this forum, leading industry experts will discuss their views of the future in
development of Next-Generation Internet Access products.

Among the questions addressed by the panel of industry experts will be:

Copper, cable, or wireless: Which media has the advantage?
How will the confusion of xDSL technologies be resolved?
ATM or Frame based traffic: Will either dominate?
How will systems be enabled to provide support for new service offerings?
What will be the architecture for future systems?
For example:
Router-based or Switch-based?
IP switching vs ATM switching?
Is co-location a prerequisite for providing high speed Internet access to
residential customers? And what will be the impact on Service Providers?
What will be the effects on the Internet of all this added traffic?
And ultimately, when does the panel foresee large scale roll-out of high speed
residential access services?

Ron Jeffries will be the moderator for this discussion. Ron is a Principal of Jeffries
Research, a market research and consulting company specializing in advanced
networking. He has more than twenty years of experience in the communications and
computing industries and is the editor and publisher of The Jeffries Letter, a monthly
industry newsletter.

Speakers:

Speakers from 3Com, Ascend, Cisco, Pairgain, and TranSwitch will soon be
announced.

Seminar Location:

Santa Clara Marriott Hotel
2700 Mission College Boulevard
Santa Clara, CA 95054
Telephone: 408-988-1500

Date and Time:

Tuesday May 12, 1998
9:00 am - 11:30 am

Register Now!

Telephone: Call Mary Lombardo at TranSwitch Corporation at
(203) 929-8810
Email: Send your name and company information to Mary Lombardo at
TranSwitch Corporation at mary@txc.com
Seminar HotLink Registration

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TranSwitch and TXC are registered trademarks of TranSwitch Corporation

Copyright c 1995-1998 TranSwitch Corporation