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To: JDN who wrote (5998)5/21/1998 1:16:00 PM
From: Joel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6980
 
FYI: Interesting reading...

Cisco, Lucent
won't partner
By Ben Heskett
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
May 20, 1998, 5:05 p.m. PT

SAN JOSE, California--The
window of opportunity for data
communications leader Cisco
Systems to partner with
telecommunications giant Lucent
Technologies has closed,
according to Cisco's chief
executive.

"We've talked about it very
aggressively--it's just not going
to happen," said John Chambers,
president and chief executive of
Cisco, in an interview at the
company's headquarters.

Equipment providers in the data
networking and
telecommunications
industries
continue to
point to several
indicators--such
as the growth of
data traffic
across
traditional
phone
networks--as evidence that a
rapid, Net-driven convergence is
taking place, offering users a
single pipe for their voice, video,
and data needs.

As a result, data-driven firms
such as Cisco, 3Com, and Bay
Networks, among others,
continue to seek partnerships
with veterans of the voice-based
networking world, hoping to fill
in the blanks in their portfolio of
capabilities.

3Com joined with Siemens AG
last fall for that purpose, and the
current rumors surrounding a
possible merger of Bay and
Northern Telecom revolve
around the same premise.

Chambers has long said there
was a certain period when his
firm could effectively partner
with Lucent or Nortel. Both
would fill the North American
component of Cisco's strategy to
form alliances in certain
segments of the industry.
Evidently, Lucent's recent
acquisition binge has left little
room for cooperation.

"Our products are overlapping
too much and our strategies are
overlapping too much,"
Chambers said.

Since late last year, Lucent has
purchased gigabit-speed start-up
Prominet, remote access player
Livingston Enterprises, and data,
voice, and video concentration
specialist Yurie Systems in deals
totaling $1.85 billion, making it
clear the company is serious
about data networking.

Chambers said the two firms
stopped talking about a possible
partnership a few months ago.

But the CEO held out hope that
Cisco and Nortel might work
together, a partnership that could
douse merger talk involving Bay.
Nortel, based in Canada, has
made it clear that it wants a
larger piece of the data
networking pie. "I would like to
have a better relationship with
Nortel," Chambers said.

Cisco already has developed a
partnership with Alcatel, a
European giant, and the
company has covered its bases in
Asia via informal work with
NEC, Chambers said.

Going forward, Chambers
predicted there would only be
three to five viable players in the
networking market, taking into
account the convergence of
voice, video, and data, and the
tendency for customers to want
to work with a few select
companies to satisfy their
information technology needs.

"This industry is going to
consolidate," he said. "My own
view is the majority of my
competitors will get bought over
the next two years."