N+I Adds Up To Growth

Smaller than in past years, this year's NetWorld + Interop show nevertheless provided a spotlight for several areas of networking industry growth, especially for Ethernet and IP-based technologies.

May 14, 2004

2 Min Read
NetworkComputing logo in a gray background | NetworkComputing

This year's NetWorld + Interop show saw a networking industry riding peaks in several areas. The show, itself, featured the new era in networking: Wi-Fi networks proliferating to a degree never seen before at a major trade convention. Even though Microsoft surprised people with its decision to get out of the Wi-Fi hardware business, expect that area to continue to grow unabated.

More important, though, were the new initiatives from the show, which revolved mainly around two areas -- IP-based networking, with a good dose of Gigabit Ethernet in the mix -- and rich-media convergence networking that will feature a mix of data, voice, and video in the enterprise. The two are hardly unrelated: VoIP services will continue to gain prominence in enterprise environments, and MCI's CEO Michael Capellas said he foresees a future in which operating systems and the telephony system are completely intermingled.

Another show theme was the industry's continued targeting of Cisco: Smaller vendors are trying to compete on price and features with the networking giant in such areas as switches, routers, and security features. Good luck. Cisco reported a stompingly good quarter on Tuesday, and it plans to hire as many as 1,000 new workers, most to be located in the United States. It would seem that the networking industry is more robust for some companies than others.

MCI's Capellas Sees All-IP Future
The future of computing and telecom is converging on an IP layer, including the rapidly increasing use of rich data, such as voice and streaming video, said MCI's CEO Michael Capellas.

Nortel, Polycom Give Voice to Videoconferencing
Through the pact, the companies plan to develop fully interoperable multipoint video capabilities that will enable Polycom systems to tap into Nortel telephony features.Qwest Drops VoIP Charge
Firing a shot for voice over IP that could be heard across the industry, Qwest Communications dropped local-access fees for calls from VoIP providers that terminate on the Qwest network.

New Networking Wares On Tap At NetWorld+Interop
Several networking and videoconferencing vendors are slated to unveil new products at NetWorld+Interop in Las Vegas that they hope will help channel partners target new markets.

Cisco's Revenue And Profits Grow
Sales and net income for the quarter ended May 1 both rose more than 20%, and the company plans to add 1,000 new hires.

Networking Is Back, Says Cisco's Chambers

Cisco's CEO talks about the recovery of IT spending, and about how business processes need to change to take advantage of IT productivity gains.

DEEP BACKGROUNDRelated TechWeb Features

The Picture Of Ethernet
A new TCP/IP offload scheme and interest by heavy hitters confirms that Ethernet is still looking good to the enterprise.

Related News

MCI And Microsoft Partner On Conferencing

NetWorld + Interop A Hotspot Heaven
Microsoft Exits Wi-Fi Hardware Business

Opinion

The Incredible Shrinking N+I

Chambers Rocks The House At N+I

Search The TechWeb Network

Read more about:

2004
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER
Stay informed! Sign up to get expert advice and insight delivered direct to your inbox

You May Also Like


More Insights