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To: aps who wrote (17310)9/16/1998 8:58:00 AM
From: David Lawrence  Respond to of 22053
 
Juniper's New-Router Shipments Kick Off Race In Internet Devices

By Lee Gomes, Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
A closely watched Silicon Valley computer networking company has
shipped its first product, kicking off a race to provide the next
generation of the Internet connection devices known as routers.
Juniper Networks Inc. of Mountain View, Calif., said that its new M40
router is at least 10 times as fast as the speediest devices from such
industry leaders as Cisco Systems Inc. Juniper's devices cost hundreds
of thousands of dollars each, and are meant to be used by
telecommunications companies, Internet service providers and others
along what is called the "backbone" of the Internet.
Routers help transmit information through computer networks, and
ever-faster routers are viewed as a key to allowing the Internet to
continue growing. And they are considered especially important if the
Internet is to transmit voice and even video signals, as is now
beginning to occur.
Juniper is being closely followed because many of its engineers are
from Cisco, and because it has attracted backing from a number of
prominent companies, including AT&T Corp., Lucent Technologies Inc.,
Northern Telecom Ltd., 3Com Corp. and Worldcom Inc.'s UUNET
Technologies. Juniper is also getting help from International Business
Machines Corp. in the design of the specialized chips it uses inside its
routers.
Those investments in Juniper were seen, in large part, as defensive
moves against Cisco's growing market power. Cisco's market share in
Internet routers, for example, is estimated at nearly 70%, and it is
developing routers that can also carry digital telephone calls over the
Internet.
Cisco said it hadn't any comment on Juniper's new product.
Juniper created a considerable buzz in networking circles when it
disclosed its plans last year. Since then, though, the market for
superfast routers has become a very crowded one, as a number of other
start-up companies have announced plans for their own devices, some of
which are promised to be even faster than Juniper's. Indeed, some of
Juniper's backers, including Lucent and Northern Telecom, are hedging
their bets by developing their own products in-house, or by also
investing in other start-ups. There was also concern that Juniper was
late with its product development.
Tuesday, Juniper's chief executive officer, Scott Kriens, said that
UUNet as well as WorldCom's MCI Communications Corp. unit were
evaluating its devices. He also said his company, in contrast to
competitors that are still in the planning stages, is prepared to ship
its routers in volume.
While superfast routers are expected to proliferate over the
Internet, industry analysts say companies like Juniper may find it a
tough go in competing against the likes of Cisco or Ascend
Communications Inc. Those companies often win sales not because their
products are the fastest, but because of the high-level ties they
develop with big accounts. "It's very hard to penetrate this
marketplace," said Nick Lippis, of Strategic Networks in Rockland, Mass.
"The big players can do a lot of creative things to limit your growth."
What's more, Cisco and the others can easily buy one of the
start-ups, as they have often done before. Indeed, Cisco Tuesday said it
would acquire closely held Clarity Wireless Corp. of Belmont, Calif., a
maker of wireless communication equipment, for $157 million in stock.
Mr. Kriens said, however, that the Internet is growing fast enough to
provide market opportunities for established players as well as new
companies like his own. "This is not a zero-sum game," he said.
Copyright (c) 1998 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.