EDGE, on & about AT&T,
June 15, 1998 v12 n20 p6(1)
New Network: Bell Atlantic Launches
Next-Generation Long Distance Data Network to Address $80
Billion Market for 21st Century Communications. Lucent to
Supply Equipment and Operating Systems. (Lucent
Technologies) (Company Business and Marketing)
Full Text: COPYRIGHT 1998 EDGE Publishing
Bell Atlantic will begin construction of a next-generation,
data packet-switched, long distance network in July, the
company said Tuesday. The new network will provide the
regional platform for data communications for customers across
the Bell Atlantic region, the nation and the world.
Bell Atlantic has selected Lucent Technologies under a
five-year contract, valued at more than $200 million, to
supply equipment and software for the East Coast network
components and to integrate several of the new network's
systems. Other vendors to be named later will supply
additional elements for the network. Deployment of services
over this network depends on regulatory approvals, the first
of which are expected to come in the next six months.
The market for data services in the region is expected to
double and possibly triple to $80-90 billion a year, by the
year 2003. The new network will support services such as
virtual private networks, work-at-home and audio and video
streaming over the World Wide Web. This network will provide
high-quality, high-speed transport services; platform services
such as Internet access and backbone transport; and a complete
range of value-added applications, such as Intranet/Extranets,
electronic commerce and video conferencing.
"Bell Atlantic will be able to provide state-of-the-art
solutions for the data communications needs of its major
customers headquartered in the northeast and mid-Atlantic
states and the hundreds of colleges and universities in the region with this
network," said Joe Farina, president and chief executive
officer- Bell Atlantic Data Solutions Group. "Our new network
will be ready to serve the expanding realm of electronic
commerce across the 'Net' and the many media-rich Internet
applications of the future." "The East Coast of the United
States is the richest and most rapidly growing data market in
the world," said Farina. "Bell Atlantic is determined to stay
ahead of our customers as their data needs expand and develop
regionally, nationally and globally."
The company conservatively estimates it will generate more
than $3 billion a year in new revenue by 2003 from long
distance transport services alone over the in-region network.
This is over and above the multi-billion dollar revenue stream
it generates today with metropolitan-area data services.
Value-added platform and application services are expected to
generate an additional $2 to $3 billion in yearly revenues.
The initial deployment will connect hubs in Boston, New
York, Philadelphia and the Washington, DC., area. Delivery of
services over the new network could begin as early as Jan. 1,
1999. Data routing hubs will be extended to serve all markets
in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic region during the course of
the next two years. These markets include Providence, R.I. and
other cities in the New England states, cities and towns in
upstate New York such as Albany, and mid-Atlantic cities such
as Pittsburgh, Richmond, Va., and Charleston, W. Va.
The network will employ the latest advances in data
technology and will deliver the highest quality service for a
complete range of applications. Bell Atlantic will extend the
capabilities of this network to other cities across the United
States and around the world to provide complete, end-to-end
solutions to national and global customers.
Bell Atlantic's new network will incorporate advanced ATM
(asynchronous transfer mode), SONET (synchronous optical
network) and WDM (wave division multiplexing) technologies.
Lucent's OneVision software will provide advanced
administrative and operations support systems capabilities
that will enable rapid service provisioning and enhanced
network management. The use of this technology means the
network will have enough flexibility to deliver bandwidth on
demand, enabling Bell Atlantic to offer affordable, tailored
data services to meet a customer's most exacting requirements.
The services that will be supported include access to the
global Internet, credit-card authorization, video conferencing
and multimedia-rich, Web-based medical, financial and
electronic commerce applications.
"Bell Atlantic's long-distance, ATM-based network will
provide a solid platform for advanced data services, including
managed Internet Protocol networks," said Stu Verge,
president-Bell Atlantic Global Networks, Inc., which is the
company in the Bell Atlantic Data Solutions Group that was
created to build and manage Bell Atlantic's long distance data
network. It also is the unit that signed the contracts with
Lucent Technologies.
The network will provide a logical addition to the
company's current suite of high-quality, local data services,
enabling Bell Atlantic to provide complete end-to-end
solutions that connect customer locations between cities and
states.
"This data network complements the high speed, local loop
services the Bell Atlantic telephone companies will be rolling
out in 1998 and 1999 using asymmetric digital subscriber line
(ADSL) technology," said Verge. "We
anticipate many of the 2,000 Internet service providers with
East Coast customers will be very interested in using
capabilities provided by Bell Atlantic's new data network,
just as they have been interested in high speed ADSL." In fact, Bell Atlantic was the
first regional Bell carrier to file with Federal regulators
for long distance data relief under section 706 of the 1996
Telecommunications Act, which would enable the company to
smoothly integrate its ADSL
services and broadband metropolitan area networks with its
next-generation data network.
The Bell Atlantic telephone companies will begin commercial
deployment of ADSL services later
this year. These ADSL services will
enable consumers to access the Internet at speeds up to 250
times faster than today's most commonly used modems. In 1999,
the Bell Atlantic companies will deploy ADSL services based on universal
specifications.
Bell Atlantic's data network will carry Internet backbone
traffic along with other traffic. The expanded capacity and
superior performance of Bell Atlantic's network will result in
improved performance for consumers purchasing Bell Atlantic's
high speed data services, and Internet users will begin to
experience the high quality, reliability and availability
characteristics they associate with phone calls over the
public voice network.
Bell Atlantic's new ATM/SONET data network also will be
capable of emulating a circuit switched, voice network over a
platform built and designed for data. Integrating voice
capabilities adds to the cost-effectiveness of the network,
and long distance voice services can be joint marketed with
services from Bell Atlantic's local telephone companies. But
delivery of voice services over the data network is contingent
on gaining the necessary regulatory approvals for Bell
Atlantic to enter the long distance voice business.
"For decades people have come to rely on and expect
reliable high- quality voice service, but there is a
revolution taking place in networking, and now people need
that same quality of service for data," said Carly Fiorina,
president of Lucent's Global Service Provider business. "That
is exactly what Bell Atlantic is setting out to provide for
them. The people of Lucent are proud that Bell Atlantic, long
a leader in offering advanced communications services,
selected them to help transform this visionary concept into
the next-generation network."
Lucent Technologies, headquartered in Murray Hill, New
Jersey, designs, builds and delivers a wide range of public
and private networks, communications systems and software,
data networking systems, business telephone systems and
microelectronics components. Bell Labs is the research and
development arm for the company. For more information on
Lucent Technologies, visit the company's Web site at
www.lucent.com.
Bell Atlantic -- formed through the merger of Bell Atlantic
and NYNEX -- is at the forefront of the new communications and
information industry. With more than 41 million telephone
access lines and 6.7 million wireless customers worldwide,
Bell Atlantic companies are premier providers of advanced
wireline voice and data services, market leaders in wireless
services and the world's largest publishers of directory
information. Bell Atlantic companies are also among the
world's largest investors in high- growth global
communications markets, with operations and investments in 22
countries.
Fact Sheet For Bell Atlantic Long Distance Data Network
Network Elements and Vendors: ATM - vendor still to be named.
o ATM will provide communications fabric to drive scale
economies and deliver quality of service capabilities over
backbone network.
SONET/WDM Transport - Lucent Technologies o SONET provides
highly resilient transmission capability. Use of WDM (wave
division multiplexing) will enable capacity expansion to keep
pace with demand growth.
Internet Protocol Packet Router - vendor still to be named.
o Router will collect, transport and manage IP-based services
and applications.
Digital Voice Switch (5ESS) - Lucent Technologies o Switch
will collect circuit-switched voice signals for translation
into ATM- based data packets. Also will provide full
interconnection with national voice signaling network.
Systems - Lucent Technologies - will ensure software
systems interoperate
1) Operations - provides functions such as ability to
monitor traffic flow over network.
2) Administration - provides database capabilities, such as
inventory of circuit assignments.
3) Maintenance - provides functions such as ability to spot
and correct network problems before they affect customers.
4) Provisioning - provides functions such as ability to
assign circuits to customers.
Network Architecture: SONET Rings o self-healing, high
capacity.
Interconnection with other networks o will have "peering"
and other interconnection relationships at appropriate
locations.
Initial four hubs: 1) Boston 2) New York 3) Philadelphia 4)
Washington, D.C. area (Arlington, Va.) Timeline for Deployment
of Services: Phase I o Deploy basic ATM/SONET network to
support services such as Internet backbone transmission and
voice -- 1Q/99 (contingent on appropriate regulatory relief)
Phase II o Expand hubs to additional cities to deploy services
-- 2Q/99 (contingent on regulatory relief) Phase III o Add
voice and data service enhancements -- 3Q/99 (contingent on
regulatory relief) |