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Technology Stocks : 3Com Corporation (COMS) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: pat mudge who wrote (26000)12/9/1998 2:55:00 PM
From: joe  Respond to of 45548
 


Pat, thanks for trying, joe



To: pat mudge who wrote (26000)12/9/1998 3:08:00 PM
From: Moonray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 45548
 
More: 3Com, Siemens in $100 million venture
CNET News - December 9, 1998, 12:00 p.m. PT

Networking firm 3Com and systems giant Siemens are betting
$100 million they can jumpstart use of internal corporate layouts for
delivering voice, video, and data communications.

The duo announced a joint venture today--including the initial joint
investment--combining 3Com's expertise in providing networking
equipment for businesses and Siemens' rich heritage in delivering
computer voice systems. The result will be a set of computer telephony
products targeted at local corporate networks, often called LANs.

Operation of the joint venture will start early next year, according to the
companies, with specific products to be released soon after.

3Com and Siemens originally announced their intentions to partner with
regard to technologies for voice, video, and data convergence last year.

The companies are hoping to ride an expected wave that will likely result
in major changes in what types of traffic traverse a data-based scheme.
Increasingly, corporations, carriers, and service providers are expected to
lean on the data portions of their networks for voice and video services,
resulting in a large market for upgrades and build-outs.

"Convergence is a very fundamental shift in the industry--This is an
inevitable evolution for your networks," said Eric Benhamou, chief
executive at 3Com, at a company user conference yesterday.

The LAN telephony niche represents a market distinct from various
voice-over-IP and convergence strategies floated by
telecommunications firms and equipment providers, targeted at the
public Internet. 3Com, Siemens, and Newbridge Networks have already
struck a deal focused on that piece of the pie.

Products expected to come out the
venture include multimedia exchanges, or gateways, for voice, video,
and data traffic and phones and adapters based on Ethernet networking
technology, according to the companies. Also likely to play a role in the
sales of these tools are 3Com's switching devices and accompanying
network management software applications.

The products will be sold under the Siemens HiNet, and 3Com
SuperStack II and CoreBuilder brand names.

The gateways will essentially act much like current public branch
exchange telecommunications devices, or PBXs--the equipment used to
connect corporations to phone services. Those PBXs were not built to
handle data traffic--a fact 3Com and Siemens hope will spur sales of the
gateway technology.

Corporations that implement data-based computer telephony will likely
see large cost savings on their phone bill, given the use of a data network
to transmit voice calls rather than the phone network of a long distance
provider.

The 3Com/Siemens venture will be headquartered in the United States,
and will operate with its own staff and management. Initial employees will
include more than 200 engineers from the parent firms.

Grubbing post 26,000 from Pat, who forgot to claim it.<g>

o~~~ O