Friday, December 11, 2009

Tech firm tuned in to network revolution - The Irish Times

Intune Networks founder John Dunne (bottom left) with fellow engineers Kevin McColgan, Peter O'Connor, Paul Nugent and Andy Redmond checking the signal from the Snow Patrol concert in Dingle.Dublin company Intune Networks is at the forefront of developing technologies that could transform the telecoms industry

A WORLD first was achieved in a quiet corner of Co Kerry last week, with the first demonstration of new technology that could revolutionise the telecoms industry. While Northern Irish band Snow Patrol held an intimate show at St James’s Church in the centre of Dingle as part of the Other Voices series, the concert was transmitted to high-definition screens across the road in Benners Hotel using a fibre-optic network.

The technology was formulated by Dublin- based telecoms equipment supplier Intune Networks, which has been tasked with setting up the Exemplar network, a new Government-backed smart network that will be built across the State.

Founded in 1999 by UCD graduates John Dunne and Tom Farrell, Intune Networks, which is based in Park West in Dublin, has developed a potential way of solving one of the biggest problems facing the development of next-generation fibre-optic communications networks: inefficient use of capacity.

The company, which recently closed a €22 million funding round, counts financier Dermot Desmond and venture-capital firm Kernel Capital among its investors.

It has developed a technology known as optical packet switch and transport (OPST). Current fibre-optic networks are underutilised, employing only a fraction of the capacity available because they send data as a single colour of light. Using OPST allows more traffic to be sent over existing fibre-optic networks using different coloured lights.

The live, high-definition transmission of the concert was used to demonstrate the company’s latest technology, a distributed telecoms switch based on optical burst switching. Using this equipment, providers could ensure mass, live, simultaneous content downloads with a guaranteed level of quality.

Users could also connect to local WiFi hotspots with a laptop or mobile device, such as an iPhone, to view the transmission.

It has taken $50 million (€33.9 million) and 10 years of development to come up with the switches that were used to create the local area network in Dingle.

The transmission of the Snow Patrol concert demonstrated how the laser technology could be used to provide simultaneous broadcasts to different areas. “Some of the network arrives in here, and we’re splitting it up and putting it on to the TV screens. Some of the video is going out to the lobby area and the bar where there are four high-def TVs,” says Dunne, speaking in the hotel in Dingle. “You have one laser sending all these signals. What it’s doing is it’s changing colours; it’s bursting one colour to this room, one colour outside, one upstairs. We’re chopping up the video.

“The technology is designed not to drop any packets [units of data]. This is one of the key inventions that the company came up with. Normally, when you send a packet over the internet, if it doesn’t arrive for some reason, a signal sends instructions to send it again.

“With our system, the packet can be chopped up, so if you only manage to send half the packet, it still gets across the network. Then you send the rest of the packet on the next available slot or burst. By creating an asynchronous access to all the bandwidth on the system, you’re able to do quality of experience.”

While the internet has become the global tool of choice for streaming video from remote locations, Intune’s technology vastly improves the possibilities. Current internet infrastructure is inherently unsuitable for such high-quality media broadcasts.

“There is no way the internet could deliver this,” says Dunne. “The internet has an unknown number of switches that your signal would have to go through. Any sort of application that involves live multimedia streaming or interactivity can’t be delivered over the internet. The internet is a fantastic global community, but as a consequence of it being a global community, you have to accept that the quality won’t be there. This is purely a local area network that would work, for example, in the region of Leinster.”

The potential for the technology is vast, opening up opportunities for everyone from local communities to budding TV moguls.

“This network will allow you to set up your own TV station effectively. If you had a gig or a local sports event, you could use the laser to pay for only a small subset of the bandwidth, and it can be monetised. It changes the economics of how this thing works,” says Dunne.

“Because the laser can tune and change, we’ve built a software interface into the network itself. You could go home and in a few minutes set up your own TV station. People could subscribe to it all over Ireland. You could blog over a live high-definition network. It could totally change how communities work because you’ve added video to communities, at the same quality as if you’re sitting next to them in the room.”

The technology can be reprogrammed easily according to the services that are required. It also uses less energy, meaning it has a lower carbon footprint than other internet technologies and fits in with the Government’s strategy for a green economy.

Developing the technology in Ireland will be beneficial to the local economy, with the Exemplar network expected to create up to 5,000 jobs in the future. Intune employs 120 staff in Dublin and Belfast; the development of the Exemplar network is expected to add an extra 350 jobs to the company.

Intune hopes Ireland will become a test bed for the technologies and will be seen as a centre of excellence, putting the State at the forefront of new developments.

The Government is firmly behind the development of the new technology. “Ireland is going to concentrate on a few areas. Optical burst switching is one where we’re leading the world,” says Barry McSweeney, director of the National Knowledge Society Strategy. “The Government intends to invest in this.”

The basic infrastructure for Intune’s technology is already in place, with 400,000 fibre rings installed in cities across Europe and North America. They are costly to install, with fixed systems that are often underutilised.

Dunne predicts that there will be a major shift in the ownership of networks in Ireland in the future. A number of operators exist here, each with their own infrastructure – a situation Dunne believes is unsustainable.

“With our system, many different network operators could use the same infrastructure. Everyone can use the bit of the network they need. What we’ve done is effectively virtualised the use of the infrastructure,” he says.

“The world can’t support all of these vendors. What we’re saying is that one of them will become a virtual operator. They’ll run the physical network and some of the others will just sit on top. They’ll all compete, not on quality, but on the content.”

Dunne predicts that eventually there will be a business model whereby operators compete based on the services they offer, such as cloud computing, or an exclusive entertainment deal they have agreed – a far cry from today’s environment where operators get paid simply for providing internet access.

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Wednesday, December 9, 2009

NEW laser fibre optic communications system to create 30,000 jobs in Ireland...

A NEW laser fibre optic communications system will create 30,000 jobs in Ireland, according to Barry McSweeney, Director of the National Knowledge Society Strategy.

The world's first public demonstration of the new technology was held in Benner's Hotel, Dingle, on Saturday night as part of RTE's television series Other Voices.

"This technology has been developed by an Irish company and we're leading the world on this. The Government is not just looking at this development - we're going to take action on it. It has tremendous potential for Ireland and for jobs and we're going to capitalise on this. We believe it will create 30,000 jobs in Ireland over the next 15 years," Mr McSweeney told The Kerryman.

He was representing the Department of Communications, Energy and Natural Resources at the demonstration.

The technology has been developed by In Tune Networks which has its main office in Dublin.

The company was founded ten years ago by two young Irishmen, John Dunne and Tom Farrell.

"I was doing a PhD in Dublin when Tom and I started this project. It's taken €50 million to develop and we employ 120 people now. This year we hired the entire UCC PhD class who were studying opto-electronics. One of our investors is Dermot Desmond. The system will provide, faster and cheaper access through television, laptops and mobile phones and will reduce electricity consumption for service providers by 75 per cent. You could create your own television station with this technology and it will be commercially available next year," John Dunne declared enthusiastically to The Kerryman.

"This development will have real national and international impact. It will reduce energy consumption and reduce operating costs for companies all over the world. We decided to launch it here in Dingle because of the Snow Patrol concert which is part of the Other Voices series," he added.

That series was being recorded in St James' Church on Main Street, just across the road from Benners Hotel.

The Snow Patrol gig was broadcast live to an audience in the hotel who watched it on HD flat screens but others were able to watch it on mobile phones and on laptops. Before the concert John Dunne, Barry McSweeney and the man behind the television series, Philip King, spoke to the audience in the hotel from the church, via the new system.

This was the first public audience to experience the pioneering technology.

You might need a PhD in laser fibre optics to appreciate the significance of this development but, according to industry experts, the Dingle demonstration heralded a new era in communications.

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Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Snow Patrol gig in Dingle marks a world first...

THE world's first use of 'optical burst switching' to transmit a live performance will take place in Dingle at the weekend during the recording of a Snow Patrol concert for the forthcoming 'Other Voices' TV series.

Optical burst switching means InTune Networks will show the Snow Patrol concert, live in High Definition in Benners Hotel, where people will also be able to pick up the concert live on their personal devices, laptops, phones, etc.

Snow Patrol fans will welcome the live link to the hotel because, even though the concert venue in St James's Church is just across the road, it has a very limited capacity.

According to Intune this will be the first step in creating a next generation smart and green communications infrastructure for Ireland.

Meanwhile, as Dingle gears up for another round of the Other Voices music series recordings and live gigs in St James's Church the promoters have finally confirmed the line up of acts which will perform.

Aside from Snow Patrol, these include ex Suede frontman Brett Anderson and Mercury Music prize winner Speech Debelle. UK indie songstress Florence and the Machine will also make an appearance, though due to promotional commitments in the UK, Florence won't be appearing as part of a live show but will record a private acoustic performance and interview with presenter Annie Mac which will be included in the TV series.

Tickets for the eighth instalment of Other Voices are like gold-dust once again this year, selling out within minutes of going on sale last week.

The final line-up is as follows; Saturday December 5, Snow Patrol and Ollie Cole; Sunday December 6, Bell X1, The Magic Numbers, The Antlers and Villagers; Monday December 7, Megafaun, Imelda May, The Lost Brothers and The Brothers Movement; Tuesday December 8, Brett Anderson, The Temper Trap, Jesca Hoop and Fionn Regan and Wednesday December 9, Richard Hawley, The XX and Speech Debelle.

On Thursday December 10, Other Voices 'Other Room', the platform for showcasing the very best in new Irish music, will be recorded in a private session in Dingle. Those to be featured in the Other Room in this eighth series will be Valerie Francis, 202s, The Chakras, O Emperor, James McMorrow and one other Irish act that is yet to be announced.

"This event and its transmission using world-first technology is a great example of Ireland as a land of creativity, innovation and inspiration and has the further benefit of establishing small sustainable enterprises which create sustained economic value in the region," said Aidan Pender, Fáilte Ireland's Director of Strategic Development.

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Monday, November 30, 2009

Intune to Showcase Switching First - Irish Dev

Intune Networks CEO Tim Fritzley foreground, with Pat Phelan, earlier this year.

Snow Patrol Concert In Dingle to be World's First Demonstration of Intune's Optical Burst Switching Technology

Dublin based telecoms equipment supplier Intune Networks, plans to give the first demonstration of its ground breaking Optical Burst Switching technology, with a live transmission of the Snow Patrol concert on December 5th, from the Other Voices Festival in Dingle, Co Kerry.

Intune Networks has partnered with Other Voices to showcase its latest technological advance - a unique distributed telecoms switch based on Optical Burst Switching - that enables mass, live, simultaneous downloads with guaranteed and unparalleled quality. It will transmit the Snow Patrol concert live, to audiences in a number of locations in Dingle.

Several other technology providers, including Envivio, Magnet and ADB are supplying user access equipment to connect to the Intune network . What will make this different to a normal broadcast is that it will be delivered over an optical burst packet switched fibre network which will guarantee uninterrupted, premium quality content - something that has not been achievable until now.

Tim Fritzley, CEO of Intune Networks (Pictured in the Foreground, with Pat Phelan) said, "The Other Voices event in Dingle is the perfect platform to showcase Intune's technology for the very first time. The technology was invented and developed in Ireland and it is fitting that a cultural event like Other Voices and a world renowned band, Snow Patrol, have partnered with us for this demonstration. This combination will help underpin Ireland's international reputation as a vibrant, dynamic, innovative society that values its living traditional and future technical cultures.

"More of life is shared and accessed on the Internet than any other medium and that trend will continue unabated with Internet traffic doubling every two years," he went on to say.

This world-first demonstration is intended to illustrate that Intune's ground breaking technology is ready for the most demanding live multi-media events and able to meet the consumer expectations across a multitude of devices and formats.

The demo will involve live, high definition streaming from the Snow Patrol Concert in St James' Church to a number of locations in Dingle via a fibre optic network. The concert will be viewable live in High Definition on screens located in Benners Hotel, or by logging onto a local WiFi spot using a laptop or mobile device.

Fritzley continued:"The world will need a next generation optical burst switch such as Intune Networks' that will deliver the quality of personal experience that everyone has come to expect . Our technology will do this with a very low carbon footprint, as it tackles the issue of the internet's power consumption, which continues to dramatically rise with the increased use of existing network equipment."

"The showcasing of Intune's technology at an established Irish cultural event is the world's first demonstration of the unique, high quality live services that can be developed and delivered globally in the coming years," Fritzley, concluded.

Since 2002, the Other Voices Festival has been bringing established international and Irish musicians and emerging talent of every musical genre to Dingle, Co. Kerry to participate in a series of sessions at St James Church which are recorded. Now in its eighth year, Other Voices has grown but has always remained true to its core and continues to be an exhilarating gathering of musical minds.

Over the years, the recording of the Other Voices television series has become a music festival in its own right. The beautiful town of Dingle provides the perfect backdrop for a diverse gathering of musical minds from across all genres. Over 250 acts have provided exclusive performances for the programme including Rufus and Martha Wainwright, Steve Earle, Amy Winehouse, Elbow, Damien Rice, Super Furry Animals, Ray Davies, Ryan Adams, Daniel Lanois, Alabama 3, The Charlatans, Seasick Steve, James Blunt and Peter, Bjorn and John.

Intune Networks was founded in Dublin in 1999 by John Dunne and Tom Farrell, UCD graduates who were researching laser technology in European-funded programmes. Over the next tenyears, Intune developed and refined its technology to solve a critical problem in the optical networking sector and this solution is now being brought to market as a family of telecom switch products.

The problem Intune claims to have solved is how to evolve network architectures to cope with the massive increase in unpredictable traffic demand while sustaining profitability and controlling costs. They have achieved this through their breakthrough technology named Optical Packet Switch and Transport (OPST). Intune has packaged this breakthrough technology into a carrier-grade networking system which will be available for deployment in 2010.

Network operators around the world are currently trying to solve this networking issue, and a large global market exists for Intune's new product line. Early versions of the products are already on trial with several large European operators, following validation of the core technology performance over the past two years.

Intune is now focussed on the telecoms equipment market where the next generation of digital service requirements such as quality of experience and high bandwidths are creating new global opportunities. It currently employs 120 people and has design centres in Dublin and Belfast.Intune supplies expertise and technology to many European and US research programmes, and its customer base includes world leading academic and commercial research groups.

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Monday, October 19, 2009

Intune Networks Selects Duolog`s Bitwise Register Management Tool - Reuters

Duolog Technologies (www.duolog.com) today announced that Intune Networks, a leading innovator in optical networking, has chosen Duolog's Bitwise tool to manage the register and memory-map infrastructures of Intune`s next generation telecommunications networking products.

Bitwise forms part of Duolog`s award-winning SOCRATES Chip Integration Platform. Bitwise captures and validates register and memory-map information and auto-generates design documentation, VHDL & Verilog RTL, C/C++, SystemC and SystemVerilog code. Bitwise users can also create their own template-based generators. Bitwise is designed to slot non-disruptively into any chip design flow, seamlessly interfacing to open standards such as IP-XACT and supporting the import and export of data from Microsoft Excel, Adobe FrameMaker and other legacy formats.

"Bitwise has enhanced the productivity of our FPGA design flow, making our development process more efficient and less labour intensive," said Tom Farrell, Co-Founder and SVP of Product Development at Intune. "We have automated the definition and use of thousands of registers across 11 different devices, using the automatically generated output across three different design teams. This tool is the centre-point of this design information and is used throughout the engineering functions in the company. The correct-by-design methodology reduces the likelihood of errors creeping in and means that engineers can concentrate on design innovation rather than manual data entry and cross-checking."

About Duolog Technologies
Duolog Technologies is an award-winning developer of EDA tools that enable the flawless and rapid integration of today`s increasingly complex SoC, ASIC and FPGA designs. Duolog`s Socrates chip integration platform employs a modular and extensible suite of tools for I/O layer definition, IP packaging, connectivity and register management.
http://www.duolog.com

About Intune Networks
Intune Networks is a telecoms equipment design company based in Ireland. Over the past 10 years, Intune has developed and refined its technology to solve a critical problem in the optical networking sector and this solution is now being brought to market as a family of telecom switch products. Intune employs 120 people and has design centres in Dublin and Belfast.
http://www.intunenetworks.com

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Light Reading includes Intune Networks in Top Picks - PR Newswire

Light Reading, the leading integrated media company serving the worldwide communications industry, today reveals its Top Picks for communications technologies, services, and products. Light Reading's editors, after weeks of discussions with readers, analysts, and industry sources, have each come up with their picks of communications products and services from all over the world that could potentially shake up the industry.

Intune Networks' Optical Burst Switching Technology was picked as one of their Top Picks to shake up the Carrier Transport market over the next 12 months.

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Tuesday, October 13, 2009

John Dunne of Intune Networks speaks at Cybercom Conference



John Dunne takes to the stage to explain the technology behind the ‘Exemplar Network’. The company John works for, Intune Networks, are poised to catapult Ireland to the top of the world’s internet stage. Within 2 years we will be using the most advanced broadband network in the world!



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Monday, October 5, 2009

Intune expects to release new product next year - Sunday Business Post

Telecoms equipment developer Intune Networks expects to release its product to market next year and record its first full year of revenues in 2011, after securing a €22 million round of investment funding last week.

John Dunne, co-founder and chief marketing officer, said that the funding meant that the company could now proceed with a full commercial launch next year.

While Intune has raised approximately €50 million in funding to date from backers, Dunne predicted that the company was likely to record revenues that were multiples of this amount. The typical investment made by telecoms companies in the type of network upgrade facilitated by Intune’s technology was in the order of $10 million, he said.

Intune’s latest funding round was the largest private equity investment in the global telecoms optical equipment sector and the third largest in the European IT sector this year. While the amount of money raised is considerable, Dunne said that this was the ‘‘type of money it takes to bring a telecoms grade product across the line’’. While the deal size is unusual for Ireland, it was ‘‘a typical play in Silicon Valley’’, he said.

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Sunday, October 4, 2009

Intune Networks Raises $32.5 Million

Intune Networks, a Dublin, Ireland-based telecom equipment supplier, has raised $32.5 million in new VC funding. Kernel Capital and financier Dermot Desmond co-led the round, and were joined by Enterprise Ireland, Invest Northern Ireland and return backers Balderton Capital, Amadeus Capital Partners and Spark Capital.

PRESS RELEASE
Intune Networks, the Dublin based telecoms equipment supplier, today announced that it has secured $32.5 million in its most recent funding round. Financier Dermot Desmond, through an investment vehicle (“Dermot Desmond”), and Venture capital firm Kernel Capital led the investment with additional funding provided by existing investors Balderton, Amadeus, Spark Capital as well as long term private investors. In addition, Enterprise Ireland and Invest Northern Ireland participated in this round of financing, to support Intune’s growth in Dublin and Belfast respectively.

The funding round, which was facilitated by Bowen Advisors, is the largest private equity investment in the global telecoms optical equipment sector in 2009. It is also the largest private equity investment round in the European telecoms equipment sector and the third largest in the European IT sector this year.

Tim Fritzley, CEO, Intune Networks said: “We received an extremely positive response to our recent fundraising road show and are delighted to have brought new investors, Dermot Desmond and Kernel Capital, on board as well as securing additional support from our existing investors and both governments, north and south of the border.

“The funding will be used for the full commercial product launch in mid 2010, as well as for expanding market coverage beyond the European carriers on into North America and Asia. There are tremendous global opportunities for Intune Networks to roll out its innovative technology to help revolutionise how next generation networks and web services are developed and delivered. We are now fully resourced and sufficiently funded to take advantage of these opportunities, to grow the company in new geographies and to cement our leadership in markets where we are already established.”

Dermot Desmond said: “I have given my support because we are firmly of the view that Intune Networks has developed a disruptive technology that will change the way that telecommunications services are delivered. I’m also delighted to have the opportunity to invest in an Irish company that has developed such a ground breaking technology. More innovation of this kind will help to reinvigorate the North and South economies.”

Niall Olden, Kernel Capital noted, “It’s a testament to the strength and potential of Intune Network’s technology that it has successfully raised funding in the current economic climate. I look forward to watching Tim Fritzley and his team further grow and develop the company as it rolls out its highly innovative telecommunications technology following ten years of research and development.”

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Desmond Among Backers As Intune Raises [Euro]22m in Funds - American Chronicle

TECHNOLOGY FIRM Intune Networks has closed a [euro]22 million round of funding, which has been led by financier Dermot Desmond and venture capital firm Kernel Capital.

Existing investors Balderton Capital, Amadeus Capital, Spark Capital, as well as unnamed private investors who backed the company during its start-up phase, also participated. State development agencies Enterprise Ireland and Invest NI, which provided support for Intune's establishment of a pound(s)9.27 million research and development centre in Belfast earlier this year, also provided funds.

The funding will support Intune through to the commercial launch of its products and a financial break-even position, chief executive Tim Fritzley told The Irish Times yesterday.

The company has focused on the European market to date - it has three telecommunications companies trialling its technology - but the funding will see it move into North America and Asia.

Intune has developed a laser-based technology called Optical Packet Switch and Transport, which allows significantly more traffic to be sent over existing fibre-optic networks using different coloured lights.

It was founded in Dublin in 1999 by UCD graduates John Dunne and Tom Farrell.

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Saturday, October 3, 2009

Desmond-backed telco Intune boosted with €22m funds fillip - Irish Independent



A FLEDGLING Irish telecoms firm is targeting a turnover of "hundreds of millions" within three years after securing €22m from a Dermot Desmond-led group of private equity investors.

Founded in 1999, Dublin-based Intune Networks is advancing a new technology to enable telecoms networks to work more efficiently.

The Irish Government has already asked the firm to build the Exemplar Smart Network here, marking the first step in the country's "next generation" communications systems.

Intune boss Tim Fritzley yesterday said the Irish deal was the "first step" but was "very small" since it only involved supporting a network that would be a "test bed for researchers".

"The big ones are the national telecoms carriers," he said. "We'll do a couple of small deals there in 2009 and then the big ones will start to happen in early 2010."

Ambitious

The big deals in 2010 will drive Intune's turnover to "small millions", all sourced in Europe, Mr Fritzley said. In 2011 the company will branch out to North America and in 2012 Asia will come onto the radar and sales will shoot to "hundreds of millions".

The ambitious forecasts came as financier Mr Desmond praised Intune's technology as something "that will change the way that telecommunications services are delivered".

Mr Fritzley said it was a "huge thing" to have gotten someone of Mr Desmond's business calibre involved, adding that the IFSC founder "is very aware of what we're doing and really understands it".

Intune's business plan predicts break-even for 2011, and the firm has already begun staffing up. "We had 120, we've added another 15 or 20 in the last few weeks, and we'll probably add another 25 by the end of the year," Mr Fritzley said. "Then we'll push past the 200 mark in 2010 depending on the technology's rollout".

Mr Fritzley said he was confident of growth because the efficiencies of Intune's technology become even more important as telecoms networks advance to next-generation wireless technologies.

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Friday, October 2, 2009

Intune Networks raises $32.5 million in venture capital funding - TMCnet

Intune Networks Limited, an Ireland-based telecom equipment design company, has raised $32.5 million in new venture capital funding. Kernel Capital Partners and financier Dermot Desmond co-led the round, with additional funding provided by existing investors Balderton Capital Management (UK), LLP, Amadeus Capital Partners Limited and Spark Capital as well as long term private investors.

In addition, Enterprise Ireland and Invest Northern Ireland also participated in this round of financing.

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Venture Capital Sings Intune’s Song - New York Times

Intune Networks, a Dublin-based supplier of telecommunications equipment, has raised $32.5 million in a new round of funding co-led by financier Dermot Desmond and Kernel Capital.

Enterprise Ireland and Invest Northern Ireland participated, as did previous investors Balderton Capital, Amadeus Capital Partners and Spark Capital.

The company said that the funding marked the largest private equity investment round in the European telecoms equipment sector and the third largest in the European IT sector this year.

View Article from peHUB

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Thursday, October 1, 2009

Intune raises €22m venture investment from investors including Dermot Desmond

A Dublin technology firm that develops tuneable lasers to make fibre networks more efficient has secured €22m worth of venture capital investment from investors that include Kernel Capital and Irish financier Dermot Desmond.

Desmond, through an investment vehicle 'Dermot Desmond', and venture-capital firm Kernel Capital, led the investment with additional funding provided by existing investors Balderton Capital, Amadeus Capital and Spark Capital, as well as long-term private investors.

Enterprise Ireland and Invest Northern Ireland also participated in this round of financing, to support Intune’s growth in Dublin and Belfast, where more than 100 people are employed by the company.

The funding round, which was facilitated by Bowen Advisors, is the largest private-equity investment in the global telecoms optical equipment sector in 2009. It is also the largest private equity investment round in the European telecoms equipment sector and the third largest in the European IT sector this year.

“We received an extremely positive response to our recent fundraising road show and are delighted to have brought new investors, Dermot Desmond and Kernel Capital on board, as well as securing additional support from our existing investors and both governments, north and south of the border,” Tim Fritzley, CEO, Intune Networks explained.

“The funding will be used for the full commercial product launch in mid 2010, as well as for expanding market coverage beyond the European carriers on into North America and Asia.”

During the summer, Intune Networks were appointed by the Irish Government to make Ireland a testbed for the Exemplar Network, a futuristic fibre network that could host multiple telcos on a single strand of fibre. The appointment has paved the way for Intune to create an additional 300 new jobs.

“There are tremendous global opportunities for Intune Networks to roll out its innovative technology to help revolutionise how next-generation networks and web services are developed and delivered. We are now fully resourced and sufficiently funded to take advantage of these opportunities, to grow the company in new geographies and to cement our leadership in markets where we are already established,” Fritzley said.

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Intune Networks secures €22m in funding - RTE



Telecoms equipment supplier Intune Networks has secured €22m in its most recent funding round.

Businessman Dermot Desmond and venture capital firm Kernel Capital were the lead investors, with additional funding provided by existing investors Balderton, Amadeus, Spark Capital and long term private investors.

Enterprise Ireland and Invest Northern Ireland also participated in the funding round to support the company's growth in both Dublin and Belfast.

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Intune currently employs 120 people and has design centres in Dublin and Belfast. The company, established in 1999, has developed the world's first programmable fibre optic platform. This allows high quality, on-demand and interactive internet services which uses up to 7%% less energy than current networks.

The firm is leading the Government's programme to build Ireland's Smart Network in July 2009.


The funding round is the largest private equity investment in the global telecoms optical equipment sector this year. It is also the largest private equity investment in the European telecoms equipment sector and the third largest in the European IT sector this year.

Intune's CEO Tim Fritzley said the funding will be used for the company's full commercial product launch by the middle of next year as well as expanding market coverage beyond the European carriers on into North America and Asia.

'I have given my support because we are firmly of the view that Intune Networks has developed a disruptive technology that will change the way that telecommunications services are delivered,' commented Dermot Desmond.

'More innovation of this kind will help to reinvigorate the North and South economies,' he added.

Intune Networks wins €22m in funding

Expansion planned into North America and Asia

High note: Intune Networks CEO Tim Fritzley

Irish telecoms equipment supplier Intune Networks has secured €22 million in funding, this year's largest private equity investment in the global telecoms optical equipment sector.

The investment was led by financier Dermot Desmond and venture capital firm Kernel Capital, with additional funding provided by existing investors Balderton, Amadeus, and Spark as well as long-term private investors.

In addition, Enterprise Ireland and Invest Northern Ireland participated in this round of financing, aimed at supporting Intune's growth in Dublin and Belfast respectively.

This is the largest private equity investment in the global telecoms optical equipment sector in 2009. It is also the largest private equity investment round in the European telecoms equipment sector and the third largest in the European IT sector this year.

Intune Networks CEO Tim Fritzley noted: "The funding will be used for the full commercial product launch in mid 2010, as well as for expanding market coverage beyond the European carriers on into North America and Asia.

Fritzley added: "We are now fully resourced and sufficiently funded to take advantage of these opportunities, to grow the company in new geographies and to cement our leadership in markets where we are already established."

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Optical Burst Startup Bags $32M - Light Reading

Irish optical startup Intune Networks has announced a new funding round of €22 million (US$32 million) to help take its optical burst switching platform to full commercial launch and to help it break into North America and Asia/Pacific. (See Intune Secures $32.5M.)

The round, which takes the company's funding to €50 million (US$72.6 million), was led by Irish serial entrepreneur and billionaire Dermot Desmond (think of him as an Irish version of Terry Matthews, if you like...) and Kernel Capital.

The news comes just weeks after Intune announced a deal with the Irish government, which is building a new communications network as part of a broader range of economic stimulus initiatives.

That deal could prove to be a catalyst for the nascent optical burst switching (OBS) market, reckons Heavy Reading analyst Sterling Perrin.

The OBS market is so small it boasts just two players: Intune and Matisse Networks , which has already expanded outside its home turf with an early score in Europe.

Intune says it's in trials with unidentified European carriers, and while it doesn't reveal any sales numbers or projections, the company expects to reach break even in 2011.

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Intune gets Desmond funding - Irish Times

Telecoms equipment supplier Intune Networks has announced it has secured €22 million in its most recent funding round.

In a statement today, the Dublin-based company said financier Dermot Desmond and Venture capital firm Kernel Capital led the investment, with additional funding from existing investors Balderton Capital, Amadeus Capital, Spark Capital, as well as long term private investors.

Enterprise Ireland and Invest Northern Ireland also contributed financing to support Intune’s growth in Dublin and Belfast.

The funding round is the largest private equity investment in the global telecoms optical equipment sector in 2009, the company said.

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€22m investment for telecoms firm Intune - Irish Examiner

Financier Dermot Desmond and venture firm Kernel Capital are among investors to have pumped €22m into Dublin-based telecoms equipment supplier Intune Networks, it was announced today.

The investment was secured by the company in its most recent funding round and is the largest private equity investment in the global telecoms optical equipment sector in 2009. It is also the largest private equity investment round in the European telecoms equipment sector and the third largest in the European IT sector this year.

“We received an extremely positive response to our recent fundraising road show and are delighted to have brought new investors, Dermot Desmond and Kernel Capital on board, as well as securing additional support from our existing investors and both governments, north and south of the border, “ said Intune Networks CEO Tim Fritzley.

Founded in Dublin in 1999 by UCD graduates John Dunne and Tom Farrell, Intune is focussed on the telecoms equipment market and specifically the area of internet switching, where it is developing network architectures to cope with the massive increase in unpredictable online traffic.

Intune currently employs 120 people and has design centres in Dublin and Belfast.

“We are firmly of the view that Intune Networks has developed a disruptive technology that will change the way that telecommunications services are delivered,” Mr Desmond said.

“I’m also delighted to have the opportunity to invest in an Irish company that has developed such a ground breaking technology. More innovation of this kind will help to reinvigorate the North and South economies.”

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Thursday, September 24, 2009

You want to find Ireland’s answer to Google or Facebook? You’re looking at it


The internet is slowing down, but Irish company Intune Networks has the solution to a global problem.

It's not quite the Victor Kiam story where the Remington shaver owner quipped: “I liked it so much I bought the company”, but Tim Fritzley’s story echoes this sentiment. Several years ago, the CEO of Intune Networks – an Irish company that could very soon be the driving force for the future of the internet globally – was the head of Microsoft’s TV division, with networks, internet entrepreneurs and Tier-1 telecom operators vying for his time.

Fritzley was cornered at a trade event by a group of earnest young Irish entrepreneurs who told him they could stop the internet from slowing down. Resignedly, he gave them two minutes.

“I asked them for some Tabasco sauce, I was ready to eat crow.” Within three years, Fritzley abandoned his high-flying career with the world’s biggest software company to join this little-known Irish start-up and relocated to Dublin.

Dublin-based Intune Networks, formed in 1999 by a group of ex-UCD photonics researchers, has developed a technology that can enable a single strand of fibre to move from carrying one signal from one operator to carrying data from 80 telecoms and TV companies all at once. It plans to manufacture and export this product and answers a problem that technology giants AT&T, IBM, Cisco and Bell Labs have been trying to solve for 30 years or more.

The fact is the internet is slowing down. While we all talk about getting faster bandwidth speeds, network operators are struggling to keep up. Every minute, 20 hours of new video are uploaded on YouTube, millions of people converse by sound and video via Skype and more than 300 million people worldwide share text, pictures, video and more on Facebook. All of this will contribute to a bandwidth bottleneck that will see network routers possibly burn out.

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Friday, September 18, 2009

Farmleigh forum aims to create new ideas for recovery... Irish Times

A MAJOR economic forum aimed at generating new links and ideas to aid Ireland’s economic recovery is to take place this weekend.

The Global Irish Economic Forum, which gets under way at Farmleigh House in Dublin today, hopes to create strategic partnerships between the State, the global Irish community and those with business connections to Ireland.

Organised by the Department of Foreign Affairs, the three-day event will discuss how the economy can position itself for the upturn, innovation on the island and promoting Ireland. About 200 delegates are expected at the inaugural event.

With the Government focusing on developing Ireland’s “smart economy”, the opportunity to connect with potential partners is looking increasingly important.

Tim Fritzley of Intune networks is hoping that the event will help attract research funds into Ireland, by way of academic institutions and industry tie-ins, using Ireland and Intune’s Exemplar smart network, a fibre-optic-based network that can cope with large volumes of internet traffic as a “test bed” for innovative technology.

Mr Fritzley is speaking at the “Innovation Island” workshop tomorrow, which is focusing on green technology and ICT.

“The goal is to attract partnerships based on the Exemplar Network capabilities,” he says. “It will allow Ireland to be a leader in the development of new goods and services. This technology will be in Ireland years before other areas get it.”

The network could attract a variety of firms into Ireland, such as those who want to develop new web applications for the next-generation semantic web and those interested in testing new content distribution models.

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Thursday, September 3, 2009

Laying the foundations for Ireland's next-generation network rollout - Irish Independent

Can Ireland's telecoms leaders collaborate to construct the nation's fibre network of the future?

THERE is no getting away from it: Ireland's first broadband decade was far from being a smooth ride. Instead of speeding down the highways of the future, think of it more like driving a 1979 Ford Cortina with no suspension across a Donegal bog.

Only in the past few years has the speed of progress that's been needed occurred, bringing broadband penetration to over 1.2 million subscribers, moving Ireland from being a laggard and placing it slightly above average in the EU-15.

Continuing this progress and building fast fibre networks will be vital if the country is to bring the trade routes of tomorrow to towns in Ireland that will attract investment and where export-focused entrepreneurs can create local jobs.

The chairman of ComReg, John Doherty, agrees. "We are making progress on LLU. In markets like France where next-generation fibre services are available, LLU has been a precursor to building NGNs. The fact that BT and Vodafone are committed to rolling out more exchanges will mean there will be a footprint to make LLU more competitive."

Doherty also points out that if Ireland wants to see early deployment of services like Long Term Evolution (LTE) - that will mature 3G to a point where services like 50Mbps over mobile networks will be possible or Data Over Cable Service Interface Specification [DOCSIS] 3.0, which will see speeds of 120Mbps over cable - it will need to get its fibre NGN in order.

The country already has an abundance of State-owned fibre networks and ducting lying unused, waiting to be joined up to the Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs) in 96 towns.

Doherty is spearheading a Stakeholders Group to get all network infrastructure owners in Ireland to work together to build this future network, but also to compete on the network. The Government is also working to create an Exemplar Network with Intune Networks to make use of the State-owned fibre assets and join up the 96 fibre MANs.

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Friday, August 7, 2009

AlcaLu Preps Grand Convergence Plan - Light Reading

Alcatel-Lucent (NYSE: ALU) plans to interweave its optical and routing technologies more closely, as part of a strategy designed to accommodate the converging of carrier networks.

The emergence of packet-optical transport systems (P-OTS), for instance, shows a melding of the optical and IP layers. The trend is taken to more ambitious levels in optical burst switching, which uses wavelengths to assign packets' destinations; Matisse Networks has been developing such a technology, and now Intune Networks appears ready to come to market as well. (See Matisse Primes Metro Ethernet Makeovers and InTune Lands Irish Gig.)

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Thursday, July 30, 2009

Government's Digital Economy Action Plan

The Government has moved to put the digital economy centre stage in its strategy for economic growth, recovery and job creation.

The launch of ‘Technology Actions to Support the Smart Economy’ this month recognises the national imperative to secure Ireland’s digital future and what actions need to happen to make it a reality.

The strategy brings key components of the digital economy together – infrastructure, innovation and green technology – into one programme.

The wide-ranging plan includes the creation of an Exemplar fibre network and an International Content Services Centre, similar to the IFSC. If successful, the plan has the potential to create 25,000 new jobs, according to the Government.....

Keeping Intune
The construction of an Exemplar network, which will dovetail with the Government’s One Stop Shop and will tie-in with the 94 Metropolitan Area Network (MAN) towns, will be spearheaded by a young Irish technology company called Intune Networks. The investment will result in 350 new jobs at the company.

Intune Networks has developed the world’s first programmable fibre optic platform, which is critical to building an Exemplar smart network. The technology effectively uses different colours of light to prioritise web traffic to ensure it arrives at its destination faster. This innovation has already excited the interest of City of London traders who are passionate about fibre, while the Government will present the technology before the EU Parliament and the World Economic Forum.

Tim Fritzley, CEO of Intune Networks, says that the plan is to kick off straightaway by creating a template based on a geographic area known as a ‘captured network’, which will be replicated across the country throughout 2010.

The plan includes making use of the rich tapestry of data centres to support cloud-computing businesses and using wireless spectrum efficiently to make Ireland a test-bed for future wireless services.

It is estimated that more than 5,000 direct jobs and a further 5,000 indirect jobs will be created over a five- to 10-year period from the network investment.

However, the core network is only one aspect. Ireland’s next-generation access network needs to be built and few operators, apart from Magnet and Smart Telecom, provide fibre-to-the-home. A pioneering joint venture between Vodafone and BT will see the companies pool resources to sort out the existing problems with copper exchanges, give homes and businesses 24Mbps speeds and could result in further progress around next-generation access via fibre.

The second part of Ryan and Lenihan’s plan involves creating energy-efficient data centres and cloud computing infrastructure. Ireland has a rich trove of data centres such as Data Electronics and Servecentric in Dublin and the Cork Internet eXchange. Choosing to prioritise the development of these centres across Ireland, the Government says, will result in 10,000 high-value jobs over the next 10 years.

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Thursday, July 23, 2009

Belfast to get a share of 350 new high tech jobs - Belfast Telegraph



Intune Networks has announced plans to create 350 new high-skilled jobs in Dublin and Belfast over the next three years.

The company was named to lead the Irish government’s programme to build an ‘Exemplar Smart Network’, the first step in creating a next generation communications infrastructure in the Republic.

Intune estimated that the network will allow for the creation of 50 new high tech jobs in the next year and a further 300 additional jobs within the next three years as the network is rolled out.

The company already employs 100 people in Dublin and Belfast of which 90% are high tech research and development jobs.

Its Belfast office employs 34 people and last month announced plans to establish a research and development centre in the city that will create 77 new positions by 2010. The latest announcement will speed up its recruitment plans, a spokeswoman said.

Tim Fritzley, chief executive of Intune Networks said: “The Exemplar Smart Network will open significant opportunities for Ireland as indigenous companies use it as a platform for developing and testing new applications and international companies come to Ireland to base R&D activity here.”

Intune Networks has developed the world’s first programmable fibre optic platform which is critical to building an Exemplar Smart Network.

This new technology allows high quality, on-demand and interactive internet services. It uses up to 75% less energy than current networks which are dominated by electronics.

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25,000 potential jobs for Ireland through smart economy plan - Digital21


Up to 25,000 new jobs could be in the pipeline if a series of projects aimed at transforming Ireland into one of the world’s foremost digital economies come to fruition, the Minister Communications, Energy and Natural Resources, Eamon Ryan TD, and Minister of State for Information Society, Minister Conor Lenihan TD, said today.

In what is one of the boldest steps taken by an Irish Government yet towards putting the country at the forefront of the digital age, the Government is to focus on building a smart broadband network called the Exemplar Network that makes use of multiple colours of fibre to dramatically boost the speed of fibre-based communications.

Minister Ryan told siliconrepublic.com that the one-stop shop to pull together all the stranded fibre assets owned by the State that could tie together 90pc of Irish urban centres will be ready to operate in early autumn, and will connect the Exemplar Network to the country’s 94 Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs) that encircle key towns.

The resulting network will make Ireland ripe for new job creation by inward investments, as well as enabling entrepreneurs to set up world-class businesses in any parish in Ireland.

Tim Fritzley, CEO of Intune Networks, the company that will build the Exemplar Network, said that the plan is to kick off straightaway by creating a template based on a geographic area known as a ‘captured network’, which will be replicated across the country throughout 2010.

The plan has already attracted the interest of the City of London, with its major financial community.

The Government’s deal with Intune will result in 300 new jobs for R&D workers and telecoms engineers, and work is set to begin immediately.

The networks plan includes making use of the rich tapestry of data centres to support cloud-computing businesses and using wireless spectrum efficiently to make Ireland a test bed for future wireless services.

The plan also includes establishing an Internet Content Services Centre (ICSC) that will enable digital rightsholders for movies, music and video games to go to market with intellectual property rights firmly and clearly established.

“We believe the ICSC could replicate and even excel beyond what we achieved with the IFSC,” said Neil Leyden, one of the contributors to the Government’s report ‘Technology Actions to Support the Smart Economy’, which was published today and outlines the Government’s new digital economy strategy,.

“The ICSC will be truly innovative and will help place Ireland and bring the content generation and distribution industries together,” Minister Ryan said. “This is about our ambition of brining Ireland to the centre stage in attempts to negotiate between piracy and content owners. This plan will leapfrog Ireland’s credentials in a relatively short time.”

The six-point plan includes capitalising on the nation’s investment in science through Science Foundation Ireland, and Minister Lenihan pointed out that Ireland’s output of patents has doubled since 2005. “We now have a situation whereby 40pc of all foreign direct investments (FDI) last year were R&D investments by global firms,” he said.

The Government’s plan also includes a vision for making Ireland a low-carbon and smart economy by creating a roadmap for smart, clean electricity provision and sustainable development around ICT, energy efficiency and clever innovations around making use of green energy such as the IBM Smartbay initiative.

“While there is a correct focus on the amount we need to save and the spending we must curtail, we must also plan for the jobs of the future,” Minister Ryan said. “We need to stimulate the economy as well in order for recovery to occur.

“The Smart Economy document pledges to make Ireland a centre of high-tech jobs that cannot be outsourced; one that uses our natural resources and our expertise to Ireland’s competitive advantage. The series of innovations in Government policy today will make the smart economy a reality.

“We have identified the challenges the world will face in the next decade. These are climate change, a peak in global oil production and the fight for scarce resources including energy and water. Understanding the challenges means there will be great rewards for the country with the solutions.

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Digital Infrastructure Ireland - Irish Independent


This week, the Government unveiled its 'Technology Actions to Support the Smart Economy', which includes a plan to create an Exemplar Network that will dovetail with its plans to create a one-stop-shop to tie all these stranded assets together and connect them to the MANs.

The decision to build an Exemplar Network will result in 350 new jobs being created at Dublin and Belfast-based tech firm Intune Networks.

Intune Networks has developed the world's first programmable fibre optic platform, which is critical to building an Exemplar Smart Network. This new technology will help to bring the internet to the next level, allowing high-quality, on-demand and interactive services.

Developing this technology has the potential to position Ireland for a wave of opportunities based on the future of the internet. Intune Network's technology, which effectively uses different colours of light to prioritise web traffic to ensure it arrives at its destination faster, has already elicited the interest of City of London traders. Meanwhile, the Government will present the technology before the EU Parliament and the World Economic Forum.

For once, Ireland has a chance to be out in front of the world in terms of digital technology, says Tim Fritzley, CEO, Intune Networks. "This is a very bold plan. We are hard at work preparing ourselves to begin with the first stage of the network in the autumn and we expect to have most of the network operational by the end of 2010."

Fritzley says that Intune's technology puts web services into the switching network, enabling what he calls semantic web for switching, or liquid bandwidth.

"Intune Networks has come up with a sophisticated colour coding fibre optic system," explains Communications Minister, Eamon Ryan TD.

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50 new technology jobs announced - RTE NEWS

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Minister for Communications, Energy & Natural Resources Eamon Ryan has announced plans to create up to 30,000 jobs over the next decade in digital and clean technology.

50 jobs are to be created in the next year followed by another 300 within three years at Irish company Intune Networks, which is building a new communications network to cut down bottlenecks in data transfer.

The Government is also planning to establish an International Content Services Centre in Dublin and a Marine Research, Test & Development Platform in Galway Bay.

Source

Digital Dreams - Irish Times

The Government hopes to create tens of thousands of hi-tech, 'green' jobs - but some observers are wondering whether we have the capability or the cash to achieve it, writes LAURA SLATTERY

"SORRY IT'S all a bit technical," Eamon Ryan apologises, as he wraps up a Government media briefing on its grand "green tech" plan to create 30,000 jobs via such innovative delights as Optical Burst Packet Switching. "But it's also real," he adds. "And it will work."

The Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources is convinced that Ireland can do a "digital leapfrog" over our economic rivals and make Ireland a "test bed location" for green technologies. It will begin its task by partnering with InTune Networks to build the Exemplar "smart network" that promises dependable, instantaneous connectivity and much more besides.

But can the so-called smart economy really generate the tens of thousands of jobs that the Government hopes will drag us out of our economic hole?

With many household users and businesses still grappling with the frustrations of broadband, there was plenty of "walk before you can run" scepticism emanating from the part of the communications market that is not Eircom, while Fine Gael communications spokesman Simon Coveney lauded the "exciting ideas" but bemoaned the next round of working groups that they would inevitably spawn.

Elsewhere in the industry, however, there were mentions of Government "bravery", while at InTune Technologies, co-founder John Dunne was in no doubt about the significance of the Government's announcement.

"This is how companies like Google are created," he says.

For Dunne, the point about Exemplar is not that end users get faster, better internet connections, but that the network will solve a "global, economic and technical problem" - permanently de-clogging network bottlenecks through patented tuneable lasers.

"If the problem isn't global, you don't get the multiplier effect from exports. If it's just economic, it can be copied by other countries and if it's technical but not economic, it has no value," he explains. Solving problems that are all three of these things is rare.

But InTune had never really planned to use its technology in Ireland in this way. That the Government has put its hands up and decided it wants to be the early adopters for once seems to have surprised the company as much as anyone: Ireland "normally waits for technology to be rolled out somewhere before touching it". If it acts now, Ireland will have a "two to three year lead time" on other countries, he says. A good thing too: "Ireland can't afford to be a follower anymore."

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Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Smart economy’ plan to create 30,000 jobs for Ireland - Inside Ireland


The Government has claimed its new ‘smart economy’ strategy has the potential to create 30,000 jobs over the next decade. The strategy hopes to place Ireland at the forefront of the digital and clean technology revolution attracting investments in the digital and green sectors.

Launching the Technology Actions to Support the Smart Economy strategy the Minister for Energy, Communications and Natural Resources, Eamon Ryan, said the six-point plan would secure a competitive advantage for Ireland.

The plan includes the building of a grid (Exemplar Smart Network). InTune Networks who have found a technological solution to worsening Network (IP) traffic will build the grid. The network company is expecting to employ 300 new staff over the next three years.

Minister for Energy, Communications and Natural Resources, Eamon Ryan, with Intune Networks CEO Tim Fritzley, at the launch of the Technology Actions to Support the Smart Economy yesterday.

Minister for Energy, Communications and Natural Resources, Eamon Ryan, with Intune Networks CEO Tim Fritzley, at the launch of the Technology Actions to Support the Smart Economy strategy.

Energy-efficient Data Centres and Cloud Computing are predicted to create 10,000 high value jobs and reduce energy costs placing Ireland on the front line for Green Data Centres.

Another 10,000 jobs are proposed to emerge in the next five to ten years from the government’s plans to create an International Content Services Centre. This centre will bring together individuals with skills in digital creative arts, communications technology and legal professionals in a bid to support the development of the 1,000 digital content companies currently located in Ireland.


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Intune Networks Named By Irish Government As Lead Partner To Develop An Exemplar Network

INTUNE NETWORKS NAMED BY IRISH GOVERNMENT AS LEAD PARTNER TO DEVELOP AN EXEMPLAR NETWORK FOR NEXT GENERATION SMART AND GREEN COMMUNICATIONS INFRASTRUCTURE - A CENTRAL PART OF THE SMART ECONOMY STRATEGY AND ACTIONS
Intune Networks to create an additional 50 new high tech jobs within 12 months followed by 300 more jobs over the next 3 years

Dublin, Tuesday 21st July 2009 - Intune Networks, the Irish telecoms equipment design company, was today named to lead the Government’s programme to build Ireland’s Exemplar Smart Network. The Exemplar will be the first step in creating a next generation smart and green communications infrastructure for Ireland. The decision to develop the exemplar network using the Intune Networks technological approach was announced by Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources, Eamon Ryan at the publication of ‘Technology Actions to Support the Smart Economy’ strategy document.

According to Minister Ryan, creating an Exemplar Smart Network based on Intune Network’s world leading technology will give Ireland first mover advantage in the establishment of a Smart Economy, helping Ireland leapfrog its international peers in digital infrastructure. This development will position Ireland as a global innovation leader and will potentially deliver significant economic benefits to the Irish economy. The network will be used to demonstrate and highlight the breadth and depth of Ireland’s vision, technologies, research and corporate capabilities which will help to attract more inward investment, rapidly expand job creation and stimulate the Smart Economy.

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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

25,000 jobs for Ireland through Govt Digital Strategy

Up to 25,000 new jobs could be in the pipeline if a series of projects aimed at transforming Ireland into one of the world’s foremost digital economies come to fruition, Communications Minister Eamon Ryan TD and information society minister Conor Lenihan TD said today.

In what is one of the boldest steps yet taken by an Irish Government towards putting the country at the forefront of the digital age the Government is to focus on building a smart broadband network called the Exemplar Network that makes use of multiple colours of fibre to dramatically boost the speed of fibre-based communications.

Minister Ryan told siliconrepublic.com that the One Stop Shop to pull together all the stranded fibre assets owned by the State that could tie together 90pc of Irish urban centres will be ready to operate in early Autumn and connect the Exemplar Network to the country’s 94 Metropolitan Area Network that encircle key towns.

The resulting network will make Ireland ripe for new job creation by inward investments as well as enable entrepreneurs to set up world class businesses in any parish in Ireland.

Tim Fritzley, CEO of Intune Networks the company that will build the Exemplar Network, said that the plan is to kickstart straightaway by creating a template based on a geographic area known as a ‘captured network’ and replicate it across the country throughout 2010. The plan has already attracted the interest of the City of London which has a major financial community.

The Government’s deal with Intune will result in 300 new jobs for R&D workers and telecoms engineers and work is set to begin immediately.

The networks plan includes making use of the rich tapestry of data centres to support cloud computing businesses, use wireless spectrum efficiently to make Ireland a testbed for future wireless services.

The plan also includes establishing an Internet Content Services Centre that will enable digital rightsholders for movies, music and video games to go to market with intellectual property rights firmly and clearly established. “We believe the ICSC could replicate and even excel beyond what we achieved with the IFSC,” said Neil Leyden, one of the contributors to the Government’s report ‘Technology Actions to Support the Smart Economy.’

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New plan targets 30,000 jobs - Ryan - RTE News


Source

Communications Minister Eamon Ryan has announced plans which target the creation of up to 30,000 jobs over the next decade in digital and clean technology.

The first measure will see 50 jobs created in the next year, followed by another 300 within three years, as Irish company Intune Networks builds a new communications network which will cut down bottlenecks in data transfer.

Intune system uses laser technology

The Intune jobs will come as a result of a plan to develop what is being called an Examplar Smart Network using Intune's technology.

Trials of the new network are expected to start early next year with the first phase in operation before the end of next year.



Intune has developed a programmable fibre optic platform, using laser technology, which it says uses up to 75% less energy than today's networks. The company says the system was developed to cope with growing amounts of data and video traffic on the internet and allows for greater speeds and higher quality interactive services.

Intune already employs 100 people in Dublin and Belfast.

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Minister unveils 350 'smart' jobs - Irish Times

More than 350 jobs will be created at a telecoms firm, it was revealed today as the Government announced its drive to develop the so-called smart economy.

A next generation communications grid is being designed which experts claim will allow Ireland to leapfrog other nations attracting investment in the digital and green sectors.

Ultimately the Government claims it has the potential to create 30,000 jobs over the next decade.

Eamon Ryan, Communications, Energy and Natural Resources Minister, said the plan would secure investment and employment of the future.

“We are setting a new economic direction for Ireland,” he said.

“In the future, those countries that focus on the development of new energy and communications technologies are those that will have the competitive edge.”

The grid, known as Exemplar Smart Network, will be built by Intune Networks using a new style of fibre optic cables.

The firm believes the infrastructure will create a wave of opportunities based on the future of the Internet which up to now was limited to regions like Silicon Valley in the US and leading Asian countries.

Source

Irish company InTune to build exemplar smart network for Ireland - DCERN

Making the smart economy real (Department of Communications, Energy & Natural Resources)
View the Technology Action Report - DCENR

Government announces new strategy for digital and clean technology in Ireland targeting 30,000 jobs in the next decade

- over 300 jobs announced today in Irish company InTune for exemplar smart network

“We need to stimulate as well as save” – Minister Ryan


Energy and Communications Minister Eamon Ryan TD and Minister of State responsible for the Information Society Conor Lenihan TD today launched “Technology Actions to Support the Smart Economy” in Government Buildings.

This is a strategy aiming to position Ireland at the forefront of the digital and clean technology revolution; creating the investment and jobs of the future. With 6 new and innovative plans for Government action and infrastructure development, the report identifies 30,000 jobs as a baseline target for achievement over the next 5-10 years.

Coupled with investment and continued progress in broadband delivery, this strategy plans to secure competitive advantage for Ireland in the high-tech/clean-tech area by positioning ourselves as early movers. The digital revolution and its convergence with energy efficiency represent a new wave of economic and social activity, which can provide the jobs and investment of the future.

The plan includes the building of a new communications network, the establishment of energy efficient data centres in Ireland, a new International Content Services Centre (ICSC) to be located in Ireland, smart electricity networks, a new application to reduce commuting times and allow for home-working and a plan to establish a marine testing centre in Galway Bay.

The 6 Actions are as follows


1) Building an Exemplar Smart Communications Network

Network (IP) traffic is doubling every 2 years, creating bottlenecks across the network. An Irish company, InTune, has developed an innovative technological solution to the problem – Optical Burst Packet Switching. InTune hold the worldwide patent for this new technology and are already supplying MIT, the European Space Agency, NASA and the US Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).


Today, the Ministers announced that InTune will be creating over 300 jobs in the next 3 years as they lead the Government’s plan to build Ireland’s Exemplar Smart Network using their technology.

It is estimated that from this move 5,000 direct jobs and a further 5,000 indirect jobs will be created over a 5-10 year period


2) Energy-efficient Data Centres and Cloud Computing

The Government is planning to position Ireland as a centre for Green Data Centres i.e. reducing the cost of data centres by reducing the amount of energy they use.

Cloud computing is a method of storing data remotely, thereby lowering server and energy costs. EMC’s data centre in Cork supports 1700 jobs. This success with new energy efficiency technology can be replicated across the country.

Choosing to prioritise the development of these centres across Ireland will create 10,000 high value jobs over the next 5-10 years.

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Download TechnologyActionReport.doc
Download TechnologyActionReport.pdf

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Telecoms Company Bucks The Trend

Trail-blazing telecommunications company, Intune Networks, has today launched a fresh recruitment drive to fill 22 high technology vacancies before the end of September. This follows on from its announcement of a £9.27m investment in Northern Ireland in April. It has promised to create 77 jobs by the end of 2010 in its research and development centre in Weavers Court in the city centre. Jayne Brady, General Manager in Belfast, said high calibre individuals should apply for the posts, which will be split between Belfast and Dublin.

She added: “This latest announcement means the company will have exceeded its initial projections for staffing levels in Northern Ireland by more than 50%.”

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Saturday, May 23, 2009

High fibre: multicoloured data transfer - Irish Times

PACKETS OF communications data – whether for phone calls, e-mails, or music, video and text files – are increasingly transported using fibreoptic cable rather than old-style copper cable. Data is carried by laser light sent through the thin optical fibres.

Because (as is seen when a rainbow forms) “white” light is actually made up of different colours, each a slightly different wavelength, a fibre cable can carry data on eight wavelengths/colours, increasing the cable’s capacity. This is called wave division multiplexing (WDM).

Currently, a separate laser has to be calibrated for each colour carried on a cable, and lots of switches must be attached to manage how data traffic is divided up into smaller packets, directed over networks, and reassembled as it enters and leaves the servers that connect fibre networks across the globe. Along the way, packets of data generally get lost or delayed – which makes for poor playback of a YouTube video or sound file, for example.

Packet loss also means carriers cannot guarantee quality of service very easily for businesses – at least not without reserving lots of extra bandwidth capacity and leaving it idle except for the odd occasion that it is required.

The breakthrough claimed by Dublin company InTune Networks is to have created a system of tuneable lasers, where a single laser can be retuned to different colours on the fly, in microseconds. So, a single laser can do the job of eight, and lots of bandwidth can be reallocated instantly if needed and then reassigned after use for a large transfer of data. It’s a bit like a gate efficiently directing car traffic down a highway so that there are no backups or delays.

In addition, intelligence built into the system eliminates the need for most switches, and allows every data packet to be sent directly to its destination IP address and monitored through its travels.

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Friday, May 22, 2009

InTune hopes to be an Irish Nokia - Irish Times



Firm’s plan to make fibre-optic communications infrastructure more efficient could create thousands of jobs here, writes KARLIN LILLINGTON of the Irish Times.

“OUR GOAL is to become the Nokia of Ireland,” says Tim Fritzley, the garrulous ex-Microsoft executive who is now chief executive of InTune Networks, a CityWest-based company that – until an industry report came out affirming its technological know-how last month – was flying well below most people’s radars.

Except perhaps, the venture funds. In 2007, InTune secured $17.7 million in funding from high-profile VC firms Balderton (formerly Benchmark), Amadeus and Spark Capital. Balderton’s Barry Moloney joined the board in late 2008.

Now, as the company readies its first product for market and goes public for the first time with what its research and development has produced, InTune is confident and clearly not at all reluctant about making big, some would say astonishing, claims.

Fritzley says InTune could well become Ireland’s first major global company and provide thousands of jobs.

Why? Because it says it has solved one of the most critical problems in the development of next generation fibre-optic communications networks, which increasingly form the skeleton on which internet and call traffic is structured.

The problem is the inefficiency and uncertainty of service inherent in the way today’s networks operate. While fibre networks have massive capacity, they are hobbled by the way light is sent through them and the growing maze of switches used to direct traffic through the networks.

Specialists in “tuneable lasers”, the lasers that send data-carrying light through fibre, InTune shifted focus three years ago to create a laser that could self-tune to send different colours of light, in microseconds and on the fly, through fibre (see panel).

This uses fibre capacity more efficiently – up to 80 per cent more efficiently – because different types of traffic can be sent discretely in different coloured frequencies, microseconds apart, in the same fibre, rather than using sets of single-coloured lasers.

In addition, data can be sent directly to its destination IP (internet) address, rather than being routed through multiple networks, servers and switches – on average, a data packet currently has to go through 20 servers often continents apart. And packets can be tracked.

InTune says this allows for massive increases in network capacity, gets rid of most of the switches in the network and achieves a significant drop in energy utilisation (70 per cent energy savings, they claim). It also enables carriers or service providers to guarantee a quality of service. A local network in a region or country using the system can co-exist with the wider internet, though Fritzley expects the system will go into the main internet backbone as well.

For end users, that means bandwidth on demand as needed and glitchless delivery of e-mail, images, video or music, to a computer or any device. Increased efficiency inside existing fibre networks would mean plenty of capacity for the boom in multimedia services like video on demand and to handle the surge in internet-enabled devices that are placing extra demands on networks.

“The result is the carriers have a hugely simplified network and they can sell guaranteed services,” says InTune’s co-founder and chief marketing officer John Dunne. “It’s like having a container of liquid bandwidth and anyone can ask for some.”

Carriers could sell guaranteed services to smaller companies, which could then sell their services to customers. “We’re doing for bandwidth what Amazon did for web services,” says Fritzley.

The company was founded in 1999 by two UCD graduates, Dunne and Tom Farrell (now chief technology officer). InTune’s early work with tuneable lasers established its reputation and won clients including MIT, the European Space Agency, Nasa and Darpa (the US Defense and Advanced Research Projects Agency).

The company has 98 employees in Dublin, of which 90 do RD and half are PhDs, says Dunne. Last December, InTune opened a lab in Belfast as well with 40 employees, to take advantage of the optical networking graduates coming out of Northern universities.

Is it hype? Or, to use the favoured term in the technology industry, “vapourware”? Fritzley, who has worked for GE and Tellabs, was convinced enough by what he saw to leave his role as Silicon Valley-based vice president of global sales and solutions at Microsoft TV to head up the company.

Final proof for company watchers must wait until larger scale deployment into live networks, but Fritzley says the company has extensively demonstrated the product to the leading network carriers, “and the technology has been completely vetted and verified by the carriers”. They are currently working closely with two major carriers as they go to live market service trials this summer.

Dunne says they believe they are three to four years ahead of possible networking competitors such as Alcatel or Cisco, and would have additional market advantage because of their patents. He says they have gone slowly to prove the technology with their potential customers.

If the company does what it expects, it will need to hire hundreds of additional employees in RD and potentially, thousands in services and support, spread between Dublin and Belfast. Hence the “Nokia of Ireland” hopes.

“We have the opportunity to develop an Irish technology corridor,” says Fritzley.

Source

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Dublin firm adding 80 Befast jobs - RTE

A Dublin-based telecommunications company is creating 80 new jobs in Belfast.

InTune Networks, based in Parkwest in Dublin, is spending £10m establishing a new research and development centre in the Sandy Row area of Belfast.

The jobs creation agency in the North, Invest NI, is contributing £1m towards the project, which will focus on improving high-speed internet connectivity in cities and towns.

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80 Jobs Created At Irish Telecoms Firm - Sky News

An Irish telecoms company is bucking the economic trend by announcing the creation of nearly 80 jobs at a research and development centre in Belfast.

Intune Networks build highly advanced optical platforms for high definition video and IT services.

Company boss Tim Fritzley said work at the centre had the potential to solve some of the largest cost-performance problems facing the telecoms world.

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Telecoms firm creates 80 jobs - UTV

A telecoms company has announced the creation of nearly 80 jobs at a research and development centre in Belfast.



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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

43 Jobs Announced at City Firm - BBC News

A technology company is to create almost 50 new jobs in south Belfast.Intune Networks makes software which is used to improve high speed internet connectivity.

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The Dublin based company is investing almost £10m in a new research and development centre in the Sandy Row area. It plans to recruit 43 highly-skilled workers in addition to the 34 already at the site.

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Friday, March 13, 2009

Irish tech firms pair up to change how world uses the web

It can pay to live on the edge, particularly if you’re a leading provider of network performance management tools. Bray-based Data Edge has just signed a deal worth €500,000 with Dublin-based Intune Networks, as the latter sets out to take on the world.

Intune has invested €30m in developing its technology to target the €8bn global metro telecommunications market. It is promising to change the way the world experiences the internet, and is hoping its latest deal with Data Edge will help it to fulfil this promise.

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Thursday, March 12, 2009

€1/2m Deal Keeps DataEdge in Tune

Tim Fritzley, CEO, Intune Networks, said, "We believe that our technology has the potential to transform the global telecommunications market. There's been enormous interest in our company over the last few years, reaching a crescendo in recent months as we prepare for our launch. In partnership with Data Edge, we've been able to prove the quality of our service, accelerate our market readiness, and reduce the capital and operational costs of development."

Paul Phelan, CTO, Data Edge, said, "This has been one of the most challenging and rewarding projects in our twenty year history. Intune has made one of the most important communications technology advancements in a decade. It will help in the repositioning of Ireland as a hotbed of innovation and investment for global IT research and development."

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Friday, February 6, 2009

Intune Networks on RTE - Drivetime


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Intune Networks

This Irish company have a laser based technology that just could revolutionise high speed internet, allowing tv and video to run in full high definition without problems and without slowing down other internet traffic.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Intune Networks Demo from RTE.ie



The above Presentation is available from: http://www.rte.ie/radio1/thebusiness/IntuneDemoLIVErte.ppt

Intune Networks on RTE Radio 1 - The Business

TUNE IN, TURN ON, GIVE UP


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Tired of crap broadband, still in the internet dark ages? Intune is a telecoms equipment design company based in Ireland. John Dunne is Chief Marketing Officer and he tells John Murray they have solved many of the key problems encountered in deploying next generation telecoms network services, such as high definition tv over the web. Intune are so confident of their systems that they say they will be able to take up large numbers of those laid off in the IT sector in recent times to meet demand. Too good to be true.. apparently not! Ties in nicely with the Great Broadband Race last week and the announcement of 3 filling in the broadband holes in Ireland. And we follow up on that Broadband race with a speed test - check your internet speed at www.irishisptest.com.