SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : LU: Long-term Prospects -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Don Dorsey who wrote (49)5/4/1998 7:58:00 PM
From: Don Dorsey  Respond to of 82
 
Lucent Technologies Unveils 3V Fast Ethernet ICs

Lucent and Enable Semiconductor To Serve As Alternate Suppliers

ALLENTOWN, Pa.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 4, 1998--Lucent Technologies' Microelectronics Group today announced the addition of three-volt single- and multi-channel Fast Ethernet transceivers to its FASTCAT(tm) Ethernet IC product line.

The new chips, which will be sampling in the second half of the year, join Lucent's five-volt integrated transceivers and quad-channel 10/100 Mbps devices in the FASTCAT line. The 5V chips entered volume production earlier this year, and the company has shipped more than 4 million 100 Mbps ports of capacity to date.

Building on a licensing agreement between Lucent and Enable Semiconductor, Inc., the two companies will serve as alternate suppliers of single channel 5V as well as single, quad, hex, and octal 3V Fast Ethernet integrated circuits.

''By serving as alternate suppliers of these products, we will make it easier for data networking designers and manufacturers to get the components they need, when they need them,'' said Jim Tann, vice president of sales and marketing for Enable Semiconductor.

''We expect to serve our customers by more than doubling our FASTCAT Ethernet transceiver product offerings within the year based on our relationship with Enable,'' said Mark Hunsicker, Ethernet products director with Lucent's Microelectronics Group.

Customers attending the Networld+Interop trade show in Las Vegas can learn more about the new products from Lucent and Enable representatives at Enable Semiconductor's booth #3081.

Enable Semiconductor is a privately held fabless semiconductor company which designs and markets leading-edge digital and mixed-signal CMOS integrated circuits. Its headquarters are in San Jose, Calif. Additional information can be found on the world wide web at enablesemi.com.

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 its web site at lucent.com.

Lucent's Microelectronics Group designs and manufactures integrated circuits and optoelectronic components for the computer and communications industries. More information about the Microelectronics Group is available from its web site at lucent.com.

Additional Technical Information

Lucent's FASTCAT(tm) Fast Ethernet and Ethernet product line includes single- and multi-channel transceivers offering a broad range of functionality tailored to serve the NIC, repeater, and switched Ethernet Market segments:

- Macrocells for ASIC applications as well as standard products
- 1, 4, 6, and 8 channel transceivers
- Standard MII as well as reduced-pin MII and switched MII
- 5V and 3.3V operations
- Single speed (10 or 100 Mbps) and combinations
- Unshielded twisted-pair and fiber-optic cables

Several chips in the FASTCAT product line have been in production since the beginning of 1998. Lucent has already shipped a combined volume in excess of 4 million 100 Mbps ports.

The product line includes the following devices:

5V applications

- LU1X54, four-channel 10 Mbps transceiver supporting MII, MII management, and auto-negotiation. Status: in production.

- LU2X54FT, four-channel, 100 Mbps transceiver, supporting 100Base-TX and FX and a bused-MII configuration for repeater applications. Status: in production.

- LU3X54FT, four-channel, 10/100 Mbps transceiver, supporting 100Base-TX and FX, port-switching for dual-speed repeater applications, and a 10-pin reduced-pin MII on each port. Status: in production.

- LU3X51FT-T100, single-channel, 10/100 Mbps transceiver supporting 100Base-TX and FX (100-pin TQFP). Status: in production.

- LU3X51FT-J80 single-channel, 10/100 Mbps transceiver supporting 100Base-TX and FX (80-pin MQFP. Status: sampling.

- LU6612, single-channel, 10/100 Mbps transceiver supporting 100Base-TX and FX. This device is pin compatible with Quality's QS6612. Status: in production.

3.3V applications

- LU3X54FTL four-channel, 10/100 Mbps transceiver, supporting 100Base-TX and FX, port-switching for dual-speed repeater applications, 3.3V MII, and a 10-pin reduced-pin MII on each port (208-pin SQFP). Status: sampling.

- LU3X31FT, single-channel, 10/100 Mbps transceiver supporting 100Base-TX and FX (80-pin MQFP). Status: sampling in July 1998.

- LU3X34 four-channel, 10/100 Mbps transceiver, supporting 100Base-TX and FX, port-switching for dual-speed repeater applications, and a standard MII or 6-pin reduced-pin MII on each port (208-pin SQFP). Status: sampling in September 1998.

- LU3X36FTR six-channel, 10/100 Mbps transceiver, supporting 100Base-TX and FX, and port-switching for dual-speed repeater applications (208-pin SQFP). Status: sampling in September 1998.

- LU3X36FTS six-channel, 10/100 Mbps transceiver, supporting 100Base-TX and FX, and a 6-pin reduced-pin MII on each port (208-pin SQFP). Status: sampling in September 1998.

- LU3X36FT six-channel, 10/100 Mbps transceiver, supporting 100Base-TX and FX, and a standard MII or 6-pin reduced-pin MII on each port (256-pin TQFP). Status: sampling in September 1998.

- LU3X38FTS eight-channel, 10/100 Mbps transceiver, supporting 100Base-TX and FX, and a 6-pin reduced-pin MII on each port. Status: sampling in December 1998.

- LU3X38FTR eight-channel, 10/100 Mbps transceiver, supporting 100Base-TX and FX, and port-switching for dual-speed repeater applications. Status: sampling in December 1998.



To: Don Dorsey who wrote (49)5/4/1998 8:06:00 PM
From: Don Dorsey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 82
 
President Launches Partnership for Advanced Technologies in Housing; Lucent to Help Provide "PATH" to Innovative Technologies for the Home

LOS ANGELES, May 4 /PRNewswire/ -- Lucent Technologies (NYSE: LU - news) today announced it will become a partner in the PATH (Partnership for Advancing Technology in Housing), a new public/private organization that brings together the federal government and leaders from the home building, product manufacturing, insurance and financial industries to expand the development and widespread use of advanced technologies designed for the homeowner marketplace.

As part of a groundbreaking ceremony today in Los Angeles, President Clinton announced the creation of PATH whose primary role is to help remove unwanted barriers to innovation. The industry itself, through companies like Lucent, will develop and deploy the technologies required for the next generation of American housing.

As a technology partner in PATH, Lucent Technologies and its Bell Laboratories will provide expertise in developing, manufacturing and deploying advanced technology solutions for both residential and commercial applications. The company's revolutionary home wiring solution, the HomeStar(R) Wiring System, will be a part of the effort to bring these technologies into the home. Manufactured in Omaha, HomeStar is a whole-house wiring system that allows homeowners to integrate the control and management of telephones, VCRs, cable televisions, home office equipment, security systems and environmental management systems.

''This partnership raises the bar for today's technology leaders to deliver the advanced technologies that will take our families into the millennium,'' said Jacqueline Totten, sales director for Lucent's HomeStar Wiring System. ''We are pleased to be one of the first partners in PATH and firmly stand behind its ultimate goal to strengthen the technology infrastructure of the country.''

''The success of the PATH initiative is dependent upon the technological leadership of our partner companies,'' said Deane M. Evans, director for PATH. ''Lucent Technologies is an important part of this nationwide effort that will enable the housing and construction industries to join the information revolution and break through institutional and regulatory barriers to innovation.''

As a PATH partner, Lucent will work with other companies and federal and state agencies to develop and implement tests of innovative products, systems and solutions, and to introduce these technologies to the housing industry standards bodies.

The federal agencies in PATH include the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Energy, Housing and Urban Development, and Labor, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the National Science Foundation.

Lucent will assist PATH in its plans to accelerate the development of innovative housing components, designs, and production methods and reduce the time needed to move technologies to market by more than half. Over the next decade, PATH's primary goals will be to:

* cut environmental impact and energy use of new and existing housing by
50 percent or more by 2010 and demonstrate clear progress toward this
goal in the next three years;
* reduce maintenance costs and risks of fire and disaster losses by 50
percent; and
* reduce the monthly cost of new housing by 20 percent or more.

''Today, it can take 10 to 25 years for a new housing product, technique or technology to achieve full market penetration,'' said Evans. ''By helping the industry close these gaps, and get next-generation technology to the market faster, we believe PATH will have a significant impact on improving the quality and affordability of U.S. housing.''

''We believe that through our partnership in PATH, our HomeStar Wiring System -- and other advanced technologies in the marketplace today -- will become the foundation for tomorrow's communities,'' added Totten.

Lucent Technologies designs, builds and delivers a wide range of public and private networks, communications systems and software, business telephone systems and microelectronics components. Bell Labs is the research and development arm for the company. More information about Lucent Technologies, headquartered in Murray Hill, NJ, is available on its Web site at lucent.com.