Cornered!
Cornered! is a blog devoted, most of the time anyway, to telecommunications: local and global issues, technology, people and trends from the perspective of someone who's been reporting, analysing and commenting on the industry since the dark ages (BC - before competition). Sometimes serious, sometimes flippant, sometimes frivolous. Controversial, analytical, informative, amusing, but never boring; a vehicle for examinations of important issues and observations on my encounters and experiences in an industry where polarised views and hyperbole are the norm.

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Technology news and Jobs arrow Cornered! arrow China's Huawei now a global force in telecoms
China's Huawei now a global force in telecoms E-mail
by Stuart Corner   
Tuesday, 18 April 2006
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Blackberry gets a raspberry from China Unicom
My colleague Stan Beer's suggestion that "not much in the way of new technology comes out of China" and that "The Chinese also still need the expertise of Western companies to implement large scale complicated technology projects" (here) certainly does not hold true in the telecoms industry.

For several years now China's two leading telecoms network equipment vendors, Huawei Technologies and ZTE Corporation, have been winning significant contracts outside China, initially in less developed nations. For a time these wins were dismissed as being primarily the result of their low prices. That might well have been true, and might still be true to an extent today, but you have only to look at a few recent developments to see that this apology for their success no longer holds water.

Let's look at the performance of just one of them, Huawei, in the past 15 months.

The ETSI committee on Telecoms & Internet converged Services & Protocols for Advanced Networks (TISPAN) is the ETSI core competence centre for fixed networks and for migration from switched circuit networks to packet-based networks with an architecture that can serve in both. It is responsible for all aspects of standardisation for present and future converged networks including the NGN.

In January 2005, Huawei Technologies was selected by the TISPAN Working Group on NGN Architecture (TISPAN WG-2) as rapporteur. Active participation in such a body requires technological competence at the cutting edge of telecommunications development. This was the first time that a technical expert from China had been selected as Rapporteur for an ETSI Technical Report in NGN. According to Richard Brennan, ETSI TISPAN vice chair and TISPAN WG-2 chair "The work at TISPAN has been helped by the active participation and technical contributions of Huawei."

In March last year, respected US Telecom market researcher Heavy Reading reported in its 2005 Wireline Telecom Equipment Market Perception Study - which "measures how well makers of telecom equipment are faring in their efforts to capture the attention of their service provider customers - that "Huawei has already surpassed several incumbent vendors in perceived market leadership. Huawei's huge jump in market perception ratings from the Fall 2003 survey is the most remarkable and probably most important development in the wireline telecom equipment industry. What makes Huawei's ascendancy even more astounding is the fact that the company still has only a minimal presence in the North American market."

(It is still persona non grata in North America after a long-running battle with Cisco, now settled, over Huawei's infringement of Cisco's intellectual property rights.)

That same month, another research firm, Dittberner Associates reported that Huawei, was the lead supplier of media gateway and softswitch VoIP ports in 2004,with 24.8 percent of ports shipped into 100 deployments by 33 carriers worldwide. Nortel came in second with 18.21 percent. Sonus, UTStarcom and Siemens rounded out the top five with 11.36, 7.63 and 7.25 percent respectively leaving 31 percent of the market for other players.

On the global market the company is posting growth rates that established Western competitors can only dream about. In the first half of 2005, its international sales reached $US2.47 billion, 61 percent of the company's total sales. During that period it gained 19 new operator customers, the most notable of which was BT for what, according to Ovum, is likely to be the most lucrative component of its 21CN project. Wireless product sales were up 120 percent on the prior year. >>Page 2

 



 
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Cornered! - Telecoms blog
Cornered! is a blog on all things tele-communication from the perspective of one who has observed, analysed commented and reported on the industry since the dark ages (BC - before competition).