The discussion board for this category, where you can see the activity leading up to our Top Pick, is right here. The category's editors will talk about their choices and field questions on that discussion board all this week.
The discussion board for this category, where you can see the activity leading up to our Top Pick, is right here. The category's editors will talk about their choices and field questions on that discussion board all this week.
I would stay away from recommendations because I still don't know what the LR's original intention was.
My research merely indicates that Huawei has failed to ship OC768 cards for over two years on their NE-series routers; so I would conclude any forward-looking praises on NE-series architecture to be extremely premature. From the hardware perspective, Huawei boxes are still quite unremarkable and mostly live off the merchant silicon.
At the same time, a bid for the core routing from ZTE went virtually unnoticed.
While being purely a product launch with no meaningful deployments, ZTE ZXR is an early indication that competiition in the routing sector is building up. Potentially, this can be far more important than the usual Huawei "stopgap" marketecture.
I'm not frustrated at all. The Top Picks were advertised as the most cutting-edge, subjective awards program we've ever done. They lived up to their billing as far as your comments indicate. While I still have your attention: What does your research indicate we should have chosen in place of Huawei?
The question really holds - you have zero evidence to back (some) of the quoted vendors claims and even less to justify their ability to deliver the promises in a reasonable timeframe.
Huawei is just an example here; it just highlights that "Top Picks" awards are highly subjective and are mostly based on human impressions rather than facts.
Interestingly enough, you missed my argument that such an award would carry more weight if focused on media and analyst response to product launches - which is really what we are talking about here.
But, of course, if you think that perception is always equal to reality, I have nothing else to say )
I appreciate your skepticism, but while these awards aren't based on market acceptance, I'd hardly call companies like Oki Electric marketing powerhouses. Sorry, your argument doesn't hold up across the board.
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What seem to be the subject of "LR Top Picks" is not the technology or even "the capability to back the claims". If the technology does not exist (yet), how would you know if the company can back it up?
The main subject for LR Top Picks seem to be the positive impression of select marketing gloss on LR staff. And this is not entirely meaningless - as we all know too well, perception is reality and good marketing people can earn their salary many times over.
So let's just be honest and spell it out - "Product Announcement Picks 2009" would be the right name for this contest. The impact of a product launch is purely subjective - but it generates media hype and customer interest, which is why it matters. So it's really an award for the marketing efforts, and should be honestly positioned as such.
Good points, all. These Top Picks really are about vision over hard dollars, so long as the company making the claims has the capability to back them up.
It's an exciting contrast, I think, with Leading Lights, which awards excellence and uses market acceptance and customer wins as a BIG indicator.
Indeed, Arista deserves some credit for their superdense datacenter switches.
On the other hand, all major network vendors pre-announced 100GE cards now, yet no single vendor ships them. Why bother about ALU? Their promises are no better than, say, Cisco's 100GE story or Juniper's 100G launch. Only time will tell who ships first.
But that's peanuts compared to Huawei case.
Get real, LR guys. Huawei only ships 20Gbps cards (LPUF-20) in their NE series today. Quite miserable for 2009, right? Now these guys claim they are launching a 400G/slot device and LR believes them like no one did vaporware launches before.
It helps to remember a golden rule - no network product is worth it's hype until it can be purchased, installed and someone agrees to adopt it into a running network. We will surely get a 400G/slot router from Huawei - perhaps by the next Chinese olympic games.
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