Showing posts with label cisco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cisco. Show all posts
Sunday, February 26, 2012

Cisco Systems to Acquire Optical Networker Lightwire for $271m

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The deal, which is expected to close in April, is a clear indicator that Cisco intends to continue to invest in optical networking products to improve its network switches.

Cisco Systems, hot on the trail of ways to improve the innards of its switches and routers, revealed Feb. 24 that it has acquired high-speed networking hardware maker Lightwire for $271 million in cash.

The deal, which is expected to close in April, is a clear indicator that Cisco intends to continue to invest in optical networking products to improve its network switches.

This is the second significant optical IT acquisition the world's largest networking company has made in less than two years. Cisco completed its acquisition of coherent optical transport technology provider CoreOptics in July 2010.

Santa Clara, Calif. and Allentown, Pa.-based Lightwire was the first to develop a proprietary process to make a new breed of high-speed optical transceiver -- a chip that is used to transmit data along a precise beam of light. These processors are smaller and use less electricity than standard chips, and Cisco will use the efficiencies to make its switches capable of carrying higher volumes of data at lower cost.

Lightwire's secret sauce is called CMOS-based (complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor) optical transceiver technology.

"We believe Cisco's increased acquisition activity in the optical component space is tacit recognition that optical technology will continue to gain importance in carrier networks, likely somewhat at the expense of the routing market," analyst George C. Notter  of Jefferies & Company, Inc. said in a media advisory. "We view the acquisition as a potential long-term negative for Finisar."

Finisar is a longtime supplier of non-optical transceiver components to Cisco.

"Of course, Cisco is a critically important customer for Finisar, contributing more than 10 percent of total company revenues in FY11 and 22 percent in FY10. While we expect it will take some time for Cisco to integrate and leverage Lightwire's technology, it seems to us that Cisco could be seeking to vertically integrate to some degree in optical -- a negative for transceiver suppliers like Finisar," Notter wrote. 


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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Cisco says Global cloud data traffic growing rapidly

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Network equipment maker Cisco Systems Inc said global cloud data traffic will grow at a compound annual rate of 66 per cent between 2010 and 2015, as consumers and businesses seek untethered access to content and applications.

By mid-decade more than a third of all data center traffic will be based in the cloud, which allows data to be stored and accessed remotely, Cisco said in its first annual Global Cloud Index published on Tuesday.

Gobal data center traffic overall will increase four-fold, a 33 per cent compound annual growth rate between 2010 and 2015, according to Cisco.

That translates into data traffic of 4.8 zettabytes per year by 2015 or every man, woman and child watching a full length movie once a day for one year.

"What was surprising is how much data is actually being moved, we started off with a zettabyte," said Suraj Shetty, vice president of product and solutions marketing, referring to 2010 when annual data traffic worldwide was at 1.1 zettabyte, which equals a trillion gigabytes.

"The evolution of cloud services is driven in large part by users' expectations to access applications and content anytime, from anywhere, over any network and with any device," Cisco said.

Economic considerations were also a significant factor, Shetty said, because cloud-based data centers could support more virtual machines and workloads than traditional data centers making remote storage more cost-efficient.

Cisco, which offers technology to build, deploy and use cloud services, expects that, by 2014, more than 50 per cent of all workloads will be processed in the cloud.

IT research firm Forrester has forecast the global cloud computing market will grow to $241 billion in 2020 from $41 billion this year.

However, it will still take some time and investments in network expansion until networks around the world are ready to handle advanced cloud services.

All regions can currently support some level of cloud services based on average download and upload speeds and the time it takes for information to pass through the network for business and consumer connections, Cisco said.

"However, few regions' average network characteristics are currently able to support the high-end advanced cloud apps," Cisco added.

Basic cloud applications include email, Web browsing or social networking, while advanced cloud services, which have higher network requirements, include advanced gaming and high definition video conferencing.

For the forecast Cisco collected network data from 10 enterprise and Internet data centers for 12 months.

More info : VentureBeat
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