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Nortel sinks Xros to save the fleet

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 itโ€™s worth, โ€œI 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 Nortelโ€™s 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. โ€œThese 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 thereโ€™s very little need to drop off smaller increments of traffic,โ€ he said. โ€œBut that (market) hasnโ€™t 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.

โ€œWhenever you convert the signal to electrical, youโ€™re able to do monitoring, regenerate, find out if the signal has degraded and boost it up,โ€ Marcheck said. โ€œIt just allows for more quality of service. With the pure optical, you donโ€™t have that level of [control]. Thatโ€™s what the carriers are looking for. Theyโ€™re looking for the granularity and also the performance monitoring. Thatโ€™s something that, at this stage, the optical switches donโ€™t 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. โ€œThe world just isnโ€™t ready for these switches yet. Itโ€™s 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 wonโ€™t have as tough a time as Nortel.

โ€œTheyโ€™re making smaller switches,โ€ he said of the competitors. โ€œNortel was going to come right out of the box with a 1000 x 1000 switch โ€“ a monster. Thereโ€™s no demand for that right now.โ€

Nortelโ€™s decision makes sense in other ways too. Stasney said, โ€œItโ€™s 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 โ€œbehind the curveโ€ in the OEO space and โ€œthey have to concentrate on that. Thatโ€™s whatโ€™s 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 โ€œis in danger of losing a lot of its core business to competitors, like Ciena, if they donโ€™t come up with the product thatโ€™s needed right now,โ€ Marcheck said.

Nortel Networks in Brampton, Ont., is at http://nortel.com

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