tfh
Volume 21, Number 30 -- August 27, 2012

The Ethernet Switch Market Is Booming

Published: August 27, 2012

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

The server market has stalled a little bit as Intel, Advanced Micro Devices, IBM, Oracle, and Fujitsu are in various stages of processor transitions. But the Ethernet switch market is going gangbusters as companies begin the transition to from Gigabit to 10 Gigabit Ethernet switching in the data center.

According to the box counters at IDC, the worldwide market for Layer 2 and 3 switching gear that adheres to the Ethernet protocol accounted for $5.52 billion in revenues, an increase of 8.5 percent year-over-year across all Ethernet port speeds. At Layers 3 through 7 in the network stack, vendors sold $376.1 million in gear, down 5.6 percent and reflecting a move toward flatter and fatter Layer 2/3 networks for many workloads rather than the tiered networks common for the past two decades.

In the quarter ended in June, Gigabit Ethernet switches collectively accounted for 55 million ports and revenues rose 6.5 percent, IDC reckons. And if you think 10GE ports are not taking off, shipments rose above 3 million ports in the second quarter and revenues for switches driving those ports were up 22.9 percent--and that is as the per-port costs of a 10GE switch and their companion server adapter cards have come down radically in the past year. With the latest Intel Xeon E5 processors, server makers are also putting 10GE ports on their motherboards, essentially making the 10GE networking free as 100Mbit and Gigabit were ahead of them, driving adoption in the data center during the dot-com boom and the ensuing bust.

Cisco Systems is still the king of Ethernet, with 62.1 percent of the Layer 2/3 Ethernet switch pie in the second quarter. But Cisco lost a half point of share in the overall pie. The company's share of the 10GE switch space was higher, though, at 66.8 percent in the second quarter, and close to the 70 percent level that the company likes to have with emerging technologies.

Hewlett-Packard was the number two Ethernet switch vendor, but well behind Cisco with only 9.2 percent of that $5.52 billion in dough from Q2 sales. Alcatel-Lucent ranked third, with 3.07 percent share, followed by emerging Chinese giant Huawei Technologies with its 2.85 percent share. Upstart Juniper Networks, which is going through switch and router product transitions right now as Cisco was doing two years ago, garnered 2.48 percent of the Q2 pie. IBM, which has its own Networking division thanks to the acquisition of Blade Network Technology a few years back, got lumped into the Others category, as did Dell with its PowerConnect and Force 10 products.

By region, Ethernet switch sales were up 17 percent in Latin America and 15.4 percent in Asia/Pacific, with EMEA being a drag with only 5.2 percent revenue growth and North America also lowering the class average a bit with its 5.9 percent growth.


RELATED STORIES

IBM RackSwitch 10 GE Switch Does Cheaper Copper Wiring

IBM Launches 40 Gigabit Ethernet Rack Switch

IBM Wheels And Deals On 10 Gigabit BNT Switches

IBM Cuts BNT Switch Tags, Adds Fibre Channel SAN Switches

IBM Has A Fire Sale on BNT Rack Switches

IBM Buys Blade Network to Control Ethernet Switches

IBM Cuts Deals on Selected Network Switches



                     Post this story to del.icio.us
               Post this story to Digg
    Post this story to Slashdot


Sponsored By
TEMBO APPLICATION GENERATION

It is extremely important to recognize that if your
installation has not yet adopted the SQL (DDL/SQE) engine
as your primary DB2 for i interface and is still primarily
using the ISAM (DDS/CQE) engine for database access,
you are using the leading high volume commercial OLTP
platform severely shackled and constrained.

Why SQL Engine?

1. The DB2 SQL engine has been the foundation of all developments and enhancements to IBM i
    (and predecessors) since 2000.

2. In a highly competitive business environment it is all about AGILITY - the DB2 SQL engine enables that.

3. It offers up-to-date database documentation and access to leading database modeling tools.

4. It is the strategic database interface for the industry (standards compliancy).

5. It allows you to present a modern database to the outside world, and to your users, with meaningful
    longer file (table) and field (column) names, which is a foundational requirement for Analytics.

6. It is the foundation for any real, lasting application modernization and agility responding to
    DB change requests.

7. It ensures:
    data integrity
    improved Return on Investment
    reduction in costs, speed to respond
    massive increase in performance
    openness
    skills availability

How To Upgrade To Native SQL Engine

Due to the perceived risk and complexity, most IBM i installations internationally have continued to use the ISAM (DDS/CQE) engine as their primary database access method. This has certainly added to the perception that the platform is legacy, whilst it is in fact probably the most advanced implemantation of the DB2 database engine. We, as the installed base, however have been guilty of severely hampering and constraining our systems as a result, causing our system to be perceived as old, unyielding and legacy.

It is entirely feasible for you to upgrade from the ISAM to SQL engine with:

    Little to no disruption
    Little to no risk
    Gradually (one file, library, database or system at a time)
    Without the use of Surrogates
    Non-invasively
    Easily
    And with no need to recompile your code (No LVLID changes)!!!

AO Foundation Solution

The fundamental requirement in the first place of implementation is to upgrade as much as possible to a high performing, native SQL (DDL) database, excluding unsupported constructs (see AO Website for details) without ANY LIVID changes.

    Evolution, not revolution.
    One File, one library, one database or one system at a time.
    Facilitate AGILITY!
    Enable ANALYTICS!
    Long file and field names "out of the box," depending on internal practices.
    Allowing any combination of ISAM and SQL to co-exist.
    No to low risk.
    Gradual, non-disruptive roadmap.
    Regain control of your database(s).
    Gradual sanitation of your database(s).
    Gradual consolidation of your Metadata.
    Regain control of your Metadata.
    Gradually enhance/enrich your Metadata ala OA Metadata Consortium.
    Native leveraged SQL database.
    Central management of Database Indexing Strategy.
    FULL, native management of your ISAM (CQE) and SQL (SQE) database(s) on DB2 for i.
    Non-invasive, incremental roadmap.

Once the inital upgrade is facilitated, the database(s) can then gradually, incrementally improved and sanitized, focusing on ROI the entire time.

AO Foundation Benefits

Immediate, low-risk, non-disruptive exploitation of the native SQL database engine.

    Solid foundation for future modernization projects.
    Your database now presents itself as modern to the outside world and your end users.
    AO Foundation removes the tedium and error-prone repetition out of upgrading to the
     SQL (SQE) engine, allowing you to focus on value adding aspects of application modernization.
    No "vendor lock-in" - we deliver your database back completely under your control.
    No LVLID changes during Phase 1 of database upgrade process, hence no recompilation
     of ANY code.
    Massive potential performance benefits
    AGILITY
    FULL, native IBM i based management of your ISAM and SQL database(s) on DB2 for i.
    Gradual, non-disruptive roadmap
    Unshackled applications, unlocking the full value of your IT investments
    Multi-Tier architecture

www.adsero-optima.com

YES YOU CAN!!!


Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik, Victor Rozek,
Jenny Thomas, Hesh Wiener, Alex Woodie
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

Sponsored Links

Townsend Security:  IBM i Encryption Without Program Changes!   >> View Webcast
looksoftware:  iBelieve New York. A free IBM i Community Event. September 27.
Help/Systems:  2012 Solutions Summit. September 17-20 in Minneapolis, MN.

 

 

IT Jungle Store Top Book Picks

BACK IN STOCK: Easy Steps to Internet Programming for System i: List Price, $49.95

The iSeries Express Web Implementer's Guide: List Price, $49.95
The iSeries Pocket Database Guide: List Price, $59
The iSeries Pocket SQL Guide: List Price, $59
The iSeries Pocket WebFacing Primer: List Price, $39
Migrating to WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49
Getting Started with WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49
The All-Everything Operating System: List Price, $35
The Best Joomla! Tutorial Ever!: List Price, $19.95


 
Four Hundred Stuff
Dos and Don'ts of DR with Richard D

IBM Delivers Tech Preview of New Java-Based 5250 Emulator

Progress Hooks DB2/400 to Microsoft LightSwitch RAD Tool

Apple's AuthenTec Buy Validates Biometrics, Valid Tech Says

Robot/CONSOLE Gets Smarter with Jobs

Four Hundred Guru
Composing An XML Document From Relational Data: Part 2

Where's The Module?

Admin Alert: Copying User Profiles Between Systems

Four Hundred Monitor
Four Hundred Monitor's
Full iSeries Events Calendar

System i PTF Guide
August 18, 2012: Volume 14, Number 33

August 11, 2012: Volume 14, Number 32

August 4, 2012: Volume 14, Number 31

July 28, 2012: Volume 14, Number 30

July 21, 2012: Volume 14, Number 29

July 14, 2012: Volume 14, Number 28

TPM at The Register
SkyTap embeds Cloud Foundry in app dev cloud

All the sauce on Big Blue's hot chip: More on Power7+

IBM fuels up zNext mainframe for launch

HP gears down NonStops for midrange, emerging markets

Tokyo U gets second FX10 Sparc supercomputer

Cray to plug Kepler GPUs into future Cascade supers

Cisco turns in solid June quarter

Buffett no longer Intel Inside

HotLink extends SuperVisor virty control freak to EC2, CloudStack

Rackspace rolls up OpenStack for private clouds

VMware lets you take vClouds out for a spin

HP hardens switches to juggle myriad virty networks

THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

looksoftware
Help/Systems
Maxava
Abacus Solutions
Tembo Application Generation


Printer Friendly Version


TABLE OF CONTENTS
IBM Lassos Texas Memory Systems For Flashy Storage

BCD And Zend Expand PHP Pact

SAP On IBM i: The Best Alternative?

As I See It: All the Server People, Hot, Hot, Hot

IBM Touts PureSystems Uptake For PoCs, In Emerging Markets

But Wait, There's More:

More Reader Feedback On Big Blue Gives A Solid Installed Base Number . . . Join John Earl's Battle . . . ECS Sales And Profit Bump Can't Offset Components Slump At Arrow . . . Vallee To Retire From Avnet As Revenues And Profits Weaken . . . The Ethernet Switch Market Is Booming . . .

The Four Hundred

BACK ISSUES




 
Subscription Information:
You can unsubscribe, change your email address, or sign up for any of IT Jungle's free e-newsletters through our Web site at http://www.itjungle.com/sub/subscribe.html.

Copyright © 1996-2012 Guild Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Guild Companies, Inc., 50 Park Terrace East, Suite 8F, New York, NY 10034

Privacy Statement