Taqua's Tops, Says Infonetics

Infonetics Research names Taqua the Class 5 packet switching leader for 2002 and 1Q03, with 39% worldwide market share

July 7, 2003

2 Min Read

RICHARDSON, Texas -- Taqua, Inc., a leading provider of next-generation voice switching systems and technologies, has been named the Class 5 packet switching leader by Infonetics Research for calendar year 2002 and for the first quarter of 2003. Class 5 Packet Switching, which is one of eight product categories tracked within Infonetics’ Next Generation Voice Products Report, is expected to exceed $390 million worldwide aggregate revenue from calendar year 2003 through 2005.

“Taqua has captured 39% worldwide market share during the first quarter, continuing their leadership from 2002,” said Kevin Mitchell, directing analyst for Service Provider Networks at Infonetics Research. “Taqua’s strong traction within the North American competitive and rural local exchange carrier markets has fueled their quarterly growth and established the company as the market leader for both the worldwide and North American Class 5 Packet Switching market.”

“Over the last 18 months, Taqua has successfully transitioned from a product-driven company to a mature, operationally focused company,” said Charlie Vogt, president and CEO of Taqua, Inc. “Performance can be measured in many ways, though none more important than customer validation which directly impacts revenue and earnings. With more than 60 customers and over 90 switches in the field, we are pleased with our performance and growth, though a long ways from achieving the benchmark we have established.”

Taqua's OCXÔ next-generation Class 5 switch provides a "switch-on-a-card" design, through which each interface card (or "circuit pack") in the OCX performs all of the functions required of a Class 5 switch. Each card provides all the dedicated resources for call processing, service logic, switch fabric, media processing, and signaling. By eliminating common equipment and providing all the functions of a Class 5 switch on each card, the OCX greatly improves service margins and gives carriers pinpoint control over network costs. A fully functional system can be deployed with a single card, with additional expansions added as markets develop. Capable of scaling from 40 to over 40,000 subscribers, Taqua’s OCX is being used by local exchange carriers for capping or replacing legacy voice switching equipment or out of region greenfield applications. The OCX is also used by a variety of competitive service providers including CLECs, Cable companies, and ISPs.

In May, Taqua set a new precedent in voice switching, by introducing a standard five-year warranty for its OCX next-generation Class 5 switch. In June, at Supercom, Taqua unveiled the EFXÔ, a central office feature server that works in conjunction with Taqua’s next-generation Class 5 Switch. The EFXÔ offers a suite of new business and residential applications enabling service providers to deliver new services including web control of business Centrex, voice mail, and personal telephony applications.

Taqua Inc.

Infonetics Research Inc.

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