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Wi-Fi News Briefs
The Hurt Is On
The downturn in the fixed wireless market is starting to impact
suppliers of unlicensed network gear that have until recently appeared
less vulnerable than some other equipment segments.
BreezeCOM Ltd. and Floware
Wireless Systems Ltd., which are about to complete their merger, announced
they were implementing a series of steps to reduce expenses, including
a reduction in the two workforces totaling about 15 percent, each.
Wi-LAN Inc. of Calgary, Canada,
another supplier of 2.4 and 5.8 GHz unlicensed wireless network equipment
and a key developer of orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM)
technology, announced a restructuring plan in response to "slower than
expected growth of the fixed wireless access market."
The plan includes reducing the company's 280-person work force by 30
percent.
At BreezeCOM, the workforce reduction will be made across all staffing
areas. The total number of employees remaining after the reduction will
be approximately 670, but the company did not say how many people would
lose their jobs.
Continued weakness in the telecom market produced a revenue decline for
wireless equipment companies in the second quarter of 2001, compared to
the first quarter of 2001, making it necessary to "better align expenses
with revenues," a BreezeCOM press agent says.
"Workforce reductions and other measures are necessary to achieve this
goal." Meanwhile, the companies will issue press releases with their reduced
second quarter 2001 results on July 26, 2001.
The restructuring at Wi-LAN intends to improve cash flow used in operations
by about $1.5 million a month, the company says.
"We have three challengesto live within our cash resources, to maintain
the growth of our revenue and market share and to maintain the market
leadership of our broadband wireless access products and the potential
of our W-OFDM technology," said Wi-LAN chairman and CEO Dr. Hatim Zaghloul.
"We believe that these changes will allow us to overcome these three
challenges."
Other measures include reducing operating expenditures and a one-third
reduction in overall cash compensation for executive officers. The immediate
cash cost of the restructuring plan will be in the range of $1 million.
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Mixed Signals?
Meanwhile, over on the licensed side, Hybrid
Networks Inc., a San Jose California-based provider of fixed wireless
systems for Multi-channel Multi-point Distribution System-based (MMDS)
Internet access providers, announced, somewhat surprisingly, that its
financials were on the upswing.
The company did report a loss of $3.1 million (14 cents per share diluted)
for its second quarter, ending June 30. But this represents a 71 percent
improvement over the $10.7 million loss reported for the same quarter
a year ago.
And revenues for the current quarter were $5.5 million, a 99 percent
increase from $2.7 million in Q2 2000.
"Our performance for the second quarter is highlighted by a return to
positive gross margins and a substantial decrease in our net loss," notes
Hybrid president and CEO Michael Greenbaum.
"We believe our relationship with Sprint,
ongoing progress with potential new customers, both domestically and internationally,
and the availability of our ThruWAVE Wireless Broadband Router will provide
us with a strong platform for growth for the second half of our fiscal
year."
Indeed, the company also recently announced a $9.3 million contract to
provide routers and base-station equipment to Sprint Corp.
Hybrid expects to complete shipping of the routers and base-station equipment
by November. Sprint will use the equipment in the markets where it offers
its Sprint Broadband Direct fixed-broadband-wireless service, for which
Hybrid has previously provided headend and CPE equipment.
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What
Reports Are Reporting
A spate of disparate market reports published recently paints a
distinctly more hopeful picture for the long-term future of broadbandspecifically wireless broadband.
According to Multimedia
Research Group Inc., a Sunnyvale, California-based provider of market
intelligence and strategy consulting, broadband-Internet subscribers will
total more than 15 million worldwide in 2001, and that number will double
by by 2004.
An additional 24 million Internet users have broadband access through
office LANs, the MRG report notes.
The report, titled IP Video & Streaming Media 2001: Worldwide Server,
Services, Content & ROI Analysis with Market Forecast-2001-2005, says
revenues for streaming-media servers and storage total $3.2 billion worldwide,
and are expected to increase to $5 billion by 2004.
The growth in streaming media is driven mostly by demand for broadband
Internet, by high expectations of broadband users and by big advances
in corporate use of streaming media technology, the company says.
"The Internet is real and will not go away," MRG analyst Krista Christian
says in a release. "Streaming also is a real outgrowth of the high broadband
demand and of well-run media companies and departments with business models
far more robust than the dot-coms."
Meanwhile, the Burton Group, a network
infrastructure research and consulting firm in Salt Lake City, recently
published its annual prediction of networking trendsamong them that
Wireless IP networks will be used more frequently to complement wired
networks.
In a few years, Burton believes fixed broadband access will compete with
or substitute for DSL and cable. And new mobile wireless networks based
on 2.5G, 3G, and 4G technologies will emerge to provide nearly ubiquitous
IP network access.
Sounds good to us.
Finally, an intriguing report from D.C.-based Criterion
Economics LLC, which suggests consumers and "producers" could benefit
by as much as $500 billion annually if everybody had broadband access.
Hmmm.
The study, titled The $500 Billion Opportunity: The Potential Economic
Benefit of Widespread Diffusion of Broadband Internet Access, was
produced by economist Robert W. Crandall of the D.C.-based Brookings Institution
and engineering consultant Charles L. Jackson, with funding from Verizon
Communications.
Their report identifies five areas that are likely to benefit customershome shopping, reduced commuting, entertainment services, conventional
telephone services and health care.
"Clearly, the impact of broadband by any measurein terms of GDP,
jobs, U.S. productivity and efficiencywill be profound," Jackson said
in the release. "We're looking at a transformative technology, one that
doesn't just create change at the margins of an economic system, but at
its core."
We don't profess to fully understand the abstruse calculations by which
the authors arrive at their startling conclusions, or exactly what they
hope to achieve by making such predictions.
After all, the predicted positive economic impacts come only when broadband
access in homes is as common as telephonesthat is, about 94 percent
penetration. We haven't heard anyone predicting yet when that will occur,
and the authors admit it will take "many years."
Still, nice to look forward to.
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