Tag Archive for Verizon

Big Tech Increases Lobbying

Big Tech Increases LobbyingThe Business Insider has a great post that lays out the lobbying spending by most of the techs stalwarts. Arik Hesseldahl at All Things D compiled the data. The data says that the telecom’s spent the most on lobbying last year. The biggest spender was Verizon (VZ) which spent $3.83 million, an increase of nearly $1 million over last year. AT&T (T) spent $3.47 million on lobbying.

Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) spent $1.6 million on lobbying in 2010, which is nearly double what it spent last year. Microsoft (MSFT), Oracle (ORCL), Google (GOOG), IBM (IBM), and Yahoo (YHOO) also increased the dollars spent on lobbying from 2009 to 2010. Only Intel (INTC) decreased its lobbying spending in 2010.

Tech Spending on Lobbying 2010

The Business Insider points out that despite their incredible influence in the world of tech, Apple (AAPL) and Facebook are hardly spending anything on lobbying. The post speculates that while Apple is influential, it doesn’t dominate anything other than mp3 players, so the government has had little reason to mess with it. (Apple rules the tablet world, but that’s an 8-month-old market.) Also, Apple doesn’t do big blockbuster acquisitions that the government looks at.

Facebook spent the least of anyone with just $120,000. The author expects this will change soon as the company’s power is growing quickly, drawing the eye of regulators.

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The telecom monoliths spent $7.3 million on lobbying, which is more than HP, MSFT, Google and IBM combined what are they up to? I wrote about AT&T’s activities previously, clearly, these firms expect something back from the politicians they bribe donate to. History has proven that the politicians on the receiving end of the bribes donations generate results for their largest contributors and not the SMB or end-user.

What do you think? What are these tech stalwarts getting for their money in Washington DC?

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Terabit Ethernet Developing

Terabit Ethernet DevelopingResearchers at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) are working on the next evolution of Ethernet – Terabit Ethernet. UCSB Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Dan Blumenthal told LightReading that the goal of the recently created Terabit Optical Ethernet Center (TOEC), is to create Terabit Ethernet (TbE) which runs at 1 trillion bits per second by 2015 and to follow it up with 100Tbit/s Ethernet by 2020.

Professor Blumenthal explained to LightReading that he wants the TOEC and its partners to produce something the industry can use, not a one-time lab experiment that only works with duct tape and glue. “We’re not talking about lab hero experiments,” Blumenthal told LightReading. The real-world focus of TOEC has helped attract partners like  Agilent Technologies Inc. (NYSE: A), Google (NASDAQ: GOOG), Intel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC), Rockwell Collins Inc., and Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ) to help with the research. I wrote about Intel’s TBPS efforts back in July.

Terabit Ethernet is hard

TOEC could probably use the help because developing TbE is looking like no simple task according to LightReading. Bob Metcalfe, Ethernet’s creator, and now a Polaris Venture Partners partner, speculated two years ago that a terabit standard might need a rethinking of everything, even the fiber itself.

Based on current UCSB research, professor Blumenthal speculates that TbE  may include:

  • Photonic integrated circuits (PICs) are a must.
  • Coherent receivers, but at a scale well beyond what’s being used for 100Gbit/s Ethernet. A likely candidate is 1,024-QAM: quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) transmitting 10 bits per symbol, a scheme likely to require 100GHz electronics.
  • To make that coherent receiver energy-efficient, TOEC is “trying to move a lot of what’s in the digital signal processor into the optics,” Blumenthal says.
  • New materials for fiber-optics aren’t out of the question. “We won’t start out with that, but it’ll move in that direction,” Blumenthal says.
  • Other items on the TOEC shopping list include optical phase-locked loops, new semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs), and methods for drastically lowering on-chip optical losses.

The questions go beyond the optical layer. To make operations more synchronous padding and frame delineation were added to 10Gbit/s and 100Gbit/s Ethernet, Blumenthal pointed out. “Do we keep doing that? Or do we go purely asynchronous? We don’t know yet. …Once you put the word ‘Ethernet’ in there, it’s not about just transmission. It’s about being backward-compatible. That’s the beauty of Ethernet. We can’t lose that essence.

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The need for TbE is real (I first wrote about Intel’s TbE efforts here) and being driven by video. More video is already riding over existing networks. “We’re going to need much faster networking to handle the explosion in Internet traffic and support new large-scale applications like cloud computing,” Professor Blumenthal told Physorg. Stuart Elby, Vice President of Network Architecture for Verizon told Physorg, “Based on current traffic growth, it’s clear that 1 Terabit per second trunks will be needed in the near future.”

Facebook is already looking at TbE in their data centers. PCWorld reports that at the Ethernet Alliance‘s Technology Exploration Forum, Donn Lee, a Facebook Engineer said, “… there is already a need for 1 terabit.” Facebook has so many servers, and those servers can process data so fast, that they could fill 64 Terabit Ethernet pipes in the backbone of one data center, Lee said.

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Recession Over??

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told us in September 2009 that the recession was “very likely over.” Mark Zandi, the chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, told CBS News on 01-30-2010  The Great Recession is over. UPS CEO Scott Davis told the Atlanta Constitution Journal on 02-03-2010 that the recession is over. So to celebrate UPS is going to cut 1,800 positions.

Andrew Bartels, a Forrester vice president, and principal analyst declared the tech recession over on 01-12-10. Despite these prognostications by pundits and politicians, global tech layoffs have soared to over 613,00 since the bottom fell out of the world economy in October 2008. Layoffs in January 2010 reached nearly 37,000, a monthly magnitude total not seen since May 2009. The telecom firms lead the layoff count in January 2010 with Verizon (VZ), Sprint (S), and AT&T (T) accounting for nearly 65% of this month’s announced layoffs.

Tech Layoffs

The overall trend for the last 8 months has been upwards, hardly an indicator that the recession is over.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

IPv6 Growing Despite Economy

IPv6 Growing Despite EconomyThe American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN) reports that demands for IPv6 address space is growing. According to the 10/19/2009 article, Next-generation Internet defies recession on NetworkWorld, during the first nine months of 2009, ARIN  received 300 requests from carriers for blocks of IPv6 address space. This compares to 250 requests received in all of 2008 and 2007.

“We’re seeing an uptick in IPv6 address space requests; it’s a very significant growth rate,” says John Curran, president, and CEO of ARIN. “We’ve seen a slight slowdown in IPv4 address space requests…It’s probably dropped off 10% or 20% year over year.

Curran says ARIN is beginning to see ISPs such as Comcast and Verizon Wireless put a great deal of effort into migrating from IPv4-based networks to those built using IPv6. “ISPs are asking for IPv6 addresses so they can make their networks IPv6-enabled so they are ready [for the future],” Curran says. “We give each ISP enough IPv6 addresses to support 4 billion networks, and each network can contain trillions and trillions of hosts.

ARIN’s Curran says the recession is not hampering carriers’ interest in IPv6. “IPv6 solves a problem that hasn’t happened yet. So seeing any demand is surprising, and it means that organizations are planning ahead,” he says. “The current weakness in the economy…is not dampening down IPv6 demand significantly because IPv6 is right around the corner for ISPs. We may be two years away from the IPv4 free pool of addresses running out, but two years, if you’re an ISP, is enough time to get one network deployed. Two years is within everyone’s planning horizon.”

ARIN plans several policy changes to push carriers towards IPv6 adoption. These include:

  • Allowing ARIN to reduce the size of IPv4 address space allocations to carriers as the industry gets closer to IPv4 address depletion.
  • Increasing access to IPv6 address space by removing the requirement for carriers to first demonstrate that they have hundreds of customers.
  • Allowing carriers to run multiple, discrete IPv6 networks that don’t have to be connected to each other, such as community networks.
  • Reconsideration of a current policy that requires the regional registries including ARIN to evenly divide up any IPv4 space they are able to recover.

This gadget has been developed by Takashi Arano, Intec NetCore

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.