Telecommunications equipment suppliers have been forced to expand their product lines.
Published:
6 March 1999 y., Saturday
Desperate to beef up their Internet technology, European telecoms are waving dollars in front of US equipment makers. In the latest deal, France_s Alcatel said Thursday that it had agreed to buy California-based Internet firm Assured Access Technology for $350 million. That news comes hard on the heels of the company_s announcement earlier this week that it plans to buy Internet equipment maker Xylan Corp. for $2 billion. Meanwhile, The New York Times reported that Siemens was about to expand into the data networking business by creating a new American unit, buying two private US firms, investing in another, and hiring a senior executive from IBM. Analysts said that should the report prove true, Siemens was making a vital strategic move into the Internet technology to compete with rivals that have already bought into the business. Telecommunications equipment suppliers have been forced to expand their product lines amid the explosion of the Internet and as the appetite for data grows. In January, Lucent Technologies agreed to acquire Ascend Communications to boost its Internet position, and Northern Telecom bought Bay Networks last year. Now the Europeans are getting into the act. Assured Access, founded in September 1996, will keep its name when the Alcatel deal is complete. Assured Access provides "public data networking solutions for carriers and service providers, including scalable, highly reliable multi-service access products for data and voice over IP," the Alcatel statement said. As for Siemens, The Times said it is expected to announce agreements to buy data networking firms Castle Networks and Argon Networks, and take a $30 million interest in Accelerated Networks Inc.
Šaltinis:
Wired News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
On 11 February, heads of state or government of European Union member states will meet in Brussels to seek a commitment towards implementing a revitalised economic strategy to boost employment and growth in the EU.
more »
International Monetary Fund forecasts that Lithuania’s economy will grow 1.6 % this year, making it “the only one of the three Baltic economies expected to be in the positive territory in 2010”.
more »
Raynair announced it would open its 40th and 1st Central European base at Kaunas, Lithuania’s second largest city, in May with 2 based aircraft and 18 routes.
more »
A new Partnership Strategy for Morocco has been approved by the Board of Executive Directors of the World Bank.
more »
The electric car is an opportunity for European industry.
more »
The EBRD’s Board of Directors has adopted a new strategy for Kazakhstan, which reinforces the Bank’s commitment to further support the Kazakh economy and sets out the priorities for its activities in the country over the next three years.
more »
The European Commission has authorised, under EU state aid rules, plans notified by Sweden to provide a guarantee that would enable Saab Automobile AB to access a loan from the European Investment Bank (EIB).
more »
At the informal meeting of the Ministers of Competitiveness (Science and Industry), to be held between 7 and 9 February in San Sebastian, the issues on the table will include placing science at the top of the EU agenda and showcasing its role in economic recovery, as well taking the debate on the electric vehicle to EU level.
more »
The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) today approved a 27-month Stand-By Arrangement with Jamaica in the amount of SDR 820.5 million (about US$1.27 billion) to support the country’s economic reforms and help it cope with the consequences of the global downturn.
more »
Mr. Nadeem Ilahi, chief of an International Monetary Fund (IMF) staff mission to the Kyrgyz Republic, issued the following statement today in Bishkek.
more »