Skip Links

Network World

  • Social Web 
  • Email 
  • Close

(Comma separation for multiple addresses)
Your Message:

Incumbents get edgy

Lucent, Nortel finally address next-generation multi-service edge
View from the Edge By Jim Duffy , Network World , 03/03/2004
Jim Duffy
  • Share/Email
  • Tweet This
  • Comment
  • Print

After ceding the market to start-ups for the past few years, Lucent and Nortel are about to re-engage themselves with the multi-service edge.

Lucent is developing a successor to its ancient CBX frame and ATM switches that the vendor hopes will dissuade carrier customers from ripping out their older CBX switches in favor of newer generation offerings from start-ups or acquired start-ups, according to sources. Nortel is developing a multiservice edge under the codename "Neptune" that will meld features of its Passport frame and ATM switches with IP capabilities from its Shasta edge service platform.

Given the heritage of both companies, the new platforms will initially focus more on legacy Layer 2 frame relay and ATM-to-IP/MPLS migration and RFC 2547 Layer 3 MPLS VPN capabilities vs. more edge router functionality such as broadband remote aggregation server, IP service and subscriber management, or IPSec VPN tunneling capabilities, sources say. But the new systems will be hybrid in nature so they can play in a router/switch market that Infonetics Research expects to grow at a 16% compounded annual rate, from $4.8 billion in 2003 to $8.6 billion in 2007.

Lucent is said to be developing the CBX 3500, a 35G bit/sec successor to its eight-year-old, 5G bit/sec CBX 500. With a fivefold increase in switching capacity, the CBX 3500 is also expected to significantly increase port and virtual circuit density over the CBX 500. WaveSmith, the multiservice edge switch start-up acquired by Ciena last year, claimed support for 128,000 VCs per forwarding blade in its five-slot, 30G bit/sec DN4100 switches.

The CBX 3500 is also expected to feature the MPLS support Lucent's been long promising for the CBX switch, which will position it as a frame relay/ATM-to-IP/MPLS edge migration platform, sources say.

Some analysts are incredulous that Lucent would be investing in product development when they've been shedding products over the past year or two in an effort to cut costs and attain profitability. Lucent killed two separate ATM and MPLS core switch efforts. Lucent is believed to have also killed a multi-service edge project around the time it allied with Juniper Networks for frame/ATM-to-MPLS development.

That "WaveSmith killer" project combined the CBX with Lucent's Springtide IP services switch. Juniper, with its Unisphere BRAS routers, may have taken exception to the Springtide element of "WaveSmith killer."

  • Share/Email
  • Tweet This
  • Comment
  • Print
Comment
Login
Forgot your account info?
Add comment
Anonymous comments subject to approval. Register here for member benefits.
Have a NetworkWorld account? Log in here. Register now for a free account.

Videos

rssRss Feed