Industry analysts says Nortel Networksโ decision to walk away from a US$3 billion investment in all-optical network hardware makes sense for the company, but bodes ill for other optical-gear makers.
Just as Nortel came to the conclusion that all-optical networking is more trouble than itโs worth, โI can see those companies (other all-optical gear makers) running into trouble over the next couple of years,โ said Jason Marcheck, senior market analyst with Pioneer Consulting LLC in Boston, Mass.
On March 6 the telecom industry was abuzz over Nortelโs decision to shut down Xros, a company it acquired in June 2000 at a cost of US$3.25 billion. Xros had developed an all-optical switch that spelled massive throughput for carriers โ up to 1,000 Terabits (one Petabit) of data.
Nortel could not be reached for comment about the shut down.
Although the firm swallowed a bitter pill with the closing, Marcheck figures the decision was justified. โThese all-optical switches were designed to be used for passthrough routes, where you just have OC48 signals sent all the way across the country; long-haul applications where thereโs very little need to drop off smaller increments of traffic,โ he said. โBut that (market) hasnโt really materialized.โ
These days, carriers are more interested in maintaining service levels than big throughputs, Marcheck explained, adding that optical-electrical-optical (OEO) switches are easier to manage and less expensive than all-optical switches.
โWhenever you convert the signal to electrical, youโre able to do monitoring, regenerate, find out if the signal has degraded and boost it up,โ Marcheck said. โIt just allows for more quality of service. With the pure optical, you donโt have that level of [control]. Thatโs what the carriers are looking for. Theyโre looking for the granularity and also the performance monitoring. Thatโs something that, at this stage, the optical switches donโt deliver.โ
For the time being, all-optical switch technology is too expensive and too cumbersome for carriers to consider seriously, said Marian Stasney, a senior analyst with the Yankee Group in Boston. โThe world just isnโt ready for these switches yet. Itโs coming, but we still need some advancements, some improvements โ faster, cheaper and better โ before carriers can afford to deploy them.โ
That fact suggests all-optical switch makers will have a hard time in the near future, Marcheck added. However, they wonโt have as tough a time as Nortel.
โTheyโre making smaller switches,โ he said of the competitors. โNortel was going to come right out of the box with a 1000 x 1000 switch โ a monster. Thereโs no demand for that right now.โ
Nortelโs decision makes sense in other ways too. Stasney said, โItโs just indicative of the fact that they realized they have to focus on the products and business units that are making money,โ which has been a yearlong mantra for the firm.
But Marcheck said Nortel has been remiss in at least one of those moneymaking areas, saying the company has fallen โbehind the curveโ in the OEO space and โthey have to concentrate on that. Thatโs whatโs going to be selling for the next couple of years.โ
In terms of OEO, the company competes with Ciena, Lucent, Tellium and soon Cisco, which has a product on the way. Nortel has yet to ship its competing OEO switch and the firm โis in danger of losing a lot of its core business to competitors, like Ciena, if they donโt come up with the product thatโs needed right now,โ Marcheck said.
Nortel Networks in Brampton, Ont., is at http://nortel.com