|
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
HOME | RESEARCH | EVENTS | WEBINARS | WHITE PAPERS | LR EUROPE | LR ASIA | UNSTRUNG | CABLE DIGITAL NEWS | CONTACT US | REGISTER |
|||||||||||||
|
CHANNELS | Broadband | Cable Digital | Components | Ethernet | IP & Convergence | Mobile | Optical | Security | Services Software | Testing | Video | VOIP
|
|||||||||||||
|
News Analysis More News Analysis
Supercomm: Hyperchip Returns, Gets SmallOctober 22, 2009 | Craig Matsumoto
| Comment (1)
no ratings CHICAGO -- Supercomm 2009 -- You have to like it when someone sneaks his own router into a Cisco Systems Inc. (Nasdaq: CSCO) party. On Wednesday, that was Richard Norman, founder of core-router startup Hyperchip Inc. Yes, Hyperchip is still alive, pursuing something smaller than its original big-iron product: the H40G, a very dense pizza-box router that can handle 60 Gbit/s of Ethernet or 40 Gbit/s of Sonet. Moreover, the router card that powers the H40G could theoretically be added to an optical system, turning it into a makeshift packet-optical transport system (P-OTS). The aspect of the router that Hyperchip is emphasizing is the small size. Norman carried it around Supercomm in a shoulder bag all day yesterday, showing it to anybody who would listen. (Norman is an exceptionally chatty guy.) He even included it in his carry-on luggage on the flight to Chicago. And, naturally, he had the router handy when Light Reading caught up with him yesterday evening at Cisco's Exception Reception, held in a ballroom near the Supercomm exhibit floor. It was an open-invitation affair, with no one at the door checking for badges or for routers in shoulder bags.
Hyperchip was one of the many core-router startups storming the market circa 2000. By 2004, it was clear that core routers weren't the key to startup success, and Hyperchip had to refinance and regroup. (See Hyperchip Trims, Hunts for Funds and The Core Was Rotten for Startups.) For its second act, Hyperchip is taking advantage of advances in chip technology. The router card that powers the H40G is based on a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA), specifically, the Stratix IV GT from Altera Corp. (Nasdaq: ALTR). It also uses a NetLogic Inc. chip to store routing tables and retrieve data from them. "We put a lot of nine-year-old FPGAs into one FPGA," Norman says, referring to the fact that more of Hyperchip's technology can be crammed into a smaller space on a chip these days. "Moore's Law is kind to hardware." The card is the real star of the show. "We can sell a few of these," Norman says, indicating the H40G, "but if someone else embeds it in their Layer 1 or Layer 2 [gear], all of a sudden their crossconnect is a router." Traffic that has to be terminated at that particular node would normally be handled by a neighboring router. Norman envisions the optical equipment using his router card to do the job. "This saves them a box," he says. It's an idea that would tie in with the industry's talk of converging the packet and optical networks, using P-OTS gear as the link between the two. (See Juniper's Packet-Optical Spells M-P-L-S, Packet Optical Transport Goes for the Long Haul, Ciena Catches Packet/Optical Convergence Bug, AlcaLu Makes Its Packet-Optical Move , and Cyan Plays God With Optical.) Hyperchip isn't at a point where it can start shipping the H40G, but it's got some potential customers that are scheduled to get the router into "serious testing" in January or February. So, what's this company been doing for the past several years? Norman says Hyperchip has survived on specialized contracts. The company hasn't had to go back to the venture capital well, other than the one VC firm that helped with the 2004 relaunch. "They were the good ones, the ones who helped us," Norman says. "Not the ones who... well, I'll just say 'no comment.' " — Craig Matsumoto, West Coast Editor, Light Reading
Newest Comments First Display in Chronological Order
LIGHT READING MARKET PLACE
The blogs and comments are the opinions only of the writers and do not reflect the views of Light Reading. They are no substitute for your own research and should not be relied upon for trading or any other purpose. |
Most Popular
Cisco Tries Again With Tandberg 11/16/2009
AT&T Joins Cloud Computing Set 11/16/2009
Sezmi Launches Video Services Pilot in LA 11/16/2009
Riverbed Goes It Alone 11/17/2009
TelcoTV 2009: Scenes From the Show 11/12/2009
Light Reading Reveals Its 2009 Top Picks 10/19/2009
The Future of Cable Business Services 2009
Thursday, December 03, 2009 Westin Times Square, New York City Packet Backhaul 2010 Virtual Tradeshow: Scaling Up to Bring Costs Down
Thursday, February 4, 2010 Tower Technology Summit
March 23- 25, 2010 Las Vegas Convention Center, Las Vegas Related Content
White Papers SPONSORED CONTENT
Podcasts SPONSORED CONTENT
Services Transformation - by Alcatel-Lucent Communications service providers want to be able to bring new services to...
Rural Ops Bridge the Digital Divide - by Tellabs Tellabs helps IOCs build triple play networks
Driving Network Transformation - by Alcatel-Lucent In order to deal with competitive pressures, the change in service models...
Back(haul) to the Future - by Tellabs Tellabs works with Vodafone to meet growing mobile broadband demands.
MRS Logistica - by Tellabs Tellabs helps MRS Logistica transform its existing, largely outdated TDM networks to IP.
Carrier Ethernet Offers an Enterprising Solution - by Tellabs What is VPLS and how does it work? Tellabs takes a closer look.
Swisscom’s Network Makeover - by Tellabs Fresh off the launch of 7.2 Mbps HSDPA, Swisscom sees 3G as an opportunity to launch a unifying ...
Telecom in Namibia - by Tellabs Tellabs helps Telecom Namibia with next-gen challenges
|
||||||||||||
|
Inside Light Reading
A quick look at what's new, upcoming, and always useful |
|||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||