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Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedAgilent Technologies Unveils Breakthrough Optical Switching Technology - Photonic Switching Platform - Company Business and Marketing
Cambridge Telcom Report, March 13, 2000
Agilent Technologies Inc. (NYSE:A) Monday announced a switching technology breakthrough that allows information (voice, data, video) to be switched as optical signals without converting them from photons to electrons, thus accelerating the telecommunications industry's move toward an all-optical network.
When combined with technology for cost-effectively increasing bandwidth (dense wavelength-division multiplexing, or DWDM), the Agilent Photonic Switching Platform provides a powerful solution for unlocking the full potential of the all-optical network. This technology will enable network equipment manufacturers to accelerate the time to market for next-generation, all-optical network elements.
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The Photonic Switching Platform includes the first commercial photonic switches ever created by Agilent -- a 32 x 32 port photonic switch and a dual 16 x 32 port photonic switch. Agilent will unveil the platform tomorrow (Mar. 7) at the Optical Fiber Communications Conference and Exhibit 2000 in Baltimore.
Agilent's new platform is a vital missing link in the development of the long-envisioned, all-optical network. With Internet applications driving an urgent need for increasing capacity in telecommunications networks, a new generation of optical switches has become necessary so that wavelengths can be better provisioned and managed as information signals across entire networks.
"As demand for communications explodes, the communications industry is being forced to make more rapid decisions about how networks are configured," said Tom White, senior vice president and general manager of Agilent's Communications Solutions Group. "While DWDM has proven to be a reliable and cost-effective platform for increasing point-to-point bandwidth, the ability to switch wavelengths has been missing until now. By applying its expertise to optical switching, Agilent is providing that missing piece."
The complete platform has been designed to accelerate time-to-market for network equipment manufacturers. The Agilent switching platform includes switch-control electronics and a simple application programming interface (API). To integrate the platform, Agilent customers only need to supply power and an industry-standard LAN interface.
Several industry leaders are already integrating the platform into carrier-class network elements. The platform's flexible, modular architecture makes it easy to build optical cross connects (OXCs), re-arrangeable optical add/drop multiplexers (OADMs) and optical protection switching modules. These elements are essential for building an all-optical network, which the communications industry needs to keep up with exploding bandwidth demand. In addition, the platform is bit-rate and protocol transparent, so it will not need costly upgrades as communications technologies continue to evolve.
"This device will change the way engineers think about next-generation switching elements in the same way Bill Hewlett's first electronic calculator changed the way engineers thought about slide rules in the early 1970s," said John O'Rourke, general manager of Agilent's Optical Networking Division. "Network equipment manufacturers must focus on the move to all-optical networks now or be surpassed by their competition."
The simplicity of the Agilent Photonic Switching Platform design is the key to its reliability. The new photonic switches are based on Agilent technology that uses an innovative combination of reliable inkjet and planar lightwave circuit (PLC) technologies. They accomplish the task of re-directing light without the help of mirrors or any other moving parts. This switch is composed of a vertical and horizontal array of permanently aligned waveguides. Light is transmitted across a horizontal path from the input to output port until a switch command is issued. When commanded, a bubble is created at the intersection of the appropriate waveguides and the light is reflected down a vertical path to the switched port. This bubble is formed using the same reliable technology now used in inkjet printers.
U.S. Availability Commercial prototypes of the Agilent Photonic Switching Platform will be available by the end of 2000. FMI: www.agilent.com/comms/photonicswitch.
> Agilent Technologies Inc. (NYSE: A) is a diversified technology company, resulting from Hewlett-Packard Company's plan to strategically realign itself into two fully independent companies. With 42,000 employees serving customers in more than 120 countries, Agilent Technologies is a global leader in designing and manufacturing test, measurement and monitoring instruments, systems and solutions, and semiconductor and optical components. The company serves markets that include communications, electronics, life sciences and healthcare. The businesses comprising Agilent, a subsidiary of HP, had net revenues of more than $8.3 billion in fiscal year 1999. FMI: www.agilent.com.CXO UnpluggedSmart Business interviews on BNET
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