Huawei Sees an SDN Future

Make way for SoftCOM, as Huawei's long-term forecasts imply a diminishing impact for wireline and wireless hardware

Craig Matsumoto, Editor-in-Chief, Light Reading

April 29, 2013

1 Min Read
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As Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. gave out its revenue forecasts during an analysts' event last week, it became clear the company sees software-defined networking (SDN) trumping hardware sales in the long term. "For Huawei, the age of hardware-driven growth has clearly ended. Indeed, Huawei is positioning SoftCOM as the network architecture vision of the next five years," writes Heavy Reading analyst Sterling Perrin in a note published Monday. SoftCOM is Huawei's vision combining SDN; network functions virtualization (NFV); hosted OSS and BSS functions; and masses of cloud-based services all over the network. It's not as though Huawei, which hosts analysts and some media in Shenzhen every year for a few days of briefings, was declaring hardware dead. But within the Carrier Networks division, Huawei expects software and services to grow at about 15 percent per year, which implies "anemic annual growth of less than 1 percent for fixed and mobile products combined, based on the figures that Huawei reported during the conference," Perrin writes. As for what SoftCOM will actually be, Huawei remains light on specifics. As Perrin points out, that's true of many vendors' SDN or NFV strategies, given that carriers are still deciding what to do with these concepts. For more

  • Huawei Unfolds SDN Roadmap

  • SoftCOM: Huawei's Take on SDN

— Craig Matsumoto, Managing Editor, Light Reading

About the Author

Craig Matsumoto

Editor-in-Chief, Light Reading

Yes, THAT Craig Matsumoto – who used to be at Light Reading from 2002 until 2013 and then went away and did other stuff and now HE'S BACK! As Editor-in-Chief. Go Craig!!

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