Sunday, July 25, 2010

Intune Verisma iVX8000 Launched..

Mobile packet traffic is forecasted to grow by a factor of ten in less than five years with video consuming more than 50% of projected new bandwidth growth. Normal growth challenges have been exacerbated by the recent proliferation of high powered mobile devices such as smart phones and netbooks which produce increasingly unpredictable data traffic patterns. This mobile growth is in addition to the doubling of packet based traffic every 18 months based on current and ever increasing new Web and Internet services.

Download iVX8000 Datasheet


Verisma solves this on-demand, unpredictable packet traffic problem. The unveiling of the product this year follows a 10 year journey of 10,000 hours of development and dedication by John Dunne and Tom Farrell who founded Intune Networks in Dublin in 1999. Both UCD graduates, they were researching tuneable laser technology in European funded programmes. Over the next 11 years, Intune developed and refined its technology and today is focussed on the telecoms equipment market where the next generation of digital service requirements such as quality of experience and high on-demand bandwidths are creating a new global opportunity which Verisma meets. Intune currently employs 120 people and has design centres in Dublin and Belfast.

Early versions of the products are already on trial with several large European operators having validated the core technology performance over the past 2 years...

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Friday, July 23, 2010

Government's 'exemplar' hits right notes with InTune investor - Irish Times

Todd Dagres, one of the most highly ranked VCs in the US, launched a successful VC career with a $12 million investment in dotcom-era media content delivery company Akamai, which went on to make several hundred million for then-employer Battery Ventures.

After a successful decade at VC firm Battery Ventures, he co-founded Spark Capital to hone in on his entertainment and internet interests. Current investments include Twitter, Covestor, Kateeva, Menara Networks, Verivue and Irish laser networking company InTune Networks.

InTune Networks is a cornerstone of the Irish Government’s “exemplar” (showcase) network and a company that Ministers have touted as potentially an “Irish Nokia” with the promise of employing thousands.

Visiting Dublin last week for an InTune board meeting, Dagres gives a short laugh at the “Nokia” tag. InTune has “very disruptive technology – it really is a generational leap” several years ahead of its competitors, he says.

The company “has a chance to be a very meaningful company” and of considerably increasing the number of well-paid employees in Ireland, but he thinks in terms of hundreds, perhaps, not thousands.

He adds: “How long did it take for Nokia to get to be the size it is now?”

But he liked what he saw in InTune even at an early stage. Rare for VCs, Spark took a stake in InTune when it was in development mode, still three years off when it expected to have a product. Now as that point approaches, Dagres is hoping the company will win customers.

While, like most VCs, he doesn’t care much for government interventions into the entrepreneurial process, he has high praise for the Irish initiative to create its exemplar network. Such a network is attractive for companies like InTune because it enables them to test products and services live rather than in a lab.

“I like governments to get out of the way, but in this case I think the Government has done something that’s smart. Without Government support it would have been hard to build something like this in Ireland.

“The exemplar really puts Ireland on the map in terms of innovation and networking because no one else has anything like this,” he says. “Not too many places have the hardware, software and optical capabilities to do something like this.”

He says having the network and companies like InTune using it means added jobs and, more important, new national expertise.

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Thursday, July 22, 2010

RACE FOR FIBRE LEADERSHIP - Digital21.ie

IRELAND’S EXEMPLAR NETWORK COULD GIVE US EDGE.
Data usage on the web, mainly video, is exploding and traditional networks won’t be able to keep up.

The nations that will attract the most foreign direct investment and that will give their homegrown businesses the best fighting chance in the decades ahead will be the ones with the most sophisticated and powerful fibre networks.

Projected increase in global internet traffic

According to the most recent study on the subject by Cisco, demand for 3D TV and HDTV via the internet will see global internet traffic increase fourfold to 767 exabytes by 2014 - 10 times all the traffic traversing IP networks in 2008. Video alone will exceed 91pc of global consumer IP traffic by 2014.

Google's plans in the US to experiment with 1Gbps fibre in a select number of communities have been met with 200,000 responses from individuals, indicating the value people are beginning to attach to these networks.

It was no small coincidence that many of the folk who had gathered to witness the switching on of Ireland's Exemplar Network in a business park in west Dublin were a mixture of scientific and cultural types who see fibre as critical to the country's industrial and creative future.

Communications Minister Eamon Ryan last week committed a further € 5m to the next two phases of the Exemplar Network, which will see it grow from circling Dublin in the second phase to being a nationwide entity by the third phase in 2013.

Ryan said the first phase of the Exemplar Network, in which the State invested €10m with Intune Networks, has already created 140 jobs and by the third phase thousands of jobs, from digital media to high-end computing, green tech and life sciences, could be created as organisations will be attracted by the speed and capability of the network.

The first phase of the Exemplar Network, the Exemplar Testbed, located at Intune's headquarters in Park West in Dublin, has a capacity for 2.5 terabytes - remarkable when you consider that this is twice the volume of traffic that the current London phone system carries.

The work of Intune Networks

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.

The managing director of EMC in Ireland, Bob Savage, explained that multinationals based here have to compete globally to win investment. EMC and subsidiary VMware employ more than 1,700 people in Cork.

"This is a tangible example of how Ireland is innovating. We are entering the world of cloud computing and scalable, robust networks will be key. As an organisation we will be looking to leverage the Exemplar Network in the months and years ahead."

Pol Mac Aonghusa, chief technology officer in charge of strategy, development and innovation at IBM, which employs 3,000-plus people in Dublin, said the Smart Cities project in Dublin, which is creating 200 jobs, has the potential to create up to 700 positions based on creating the energy, living and traffic-management solutions for future cities.

"The key to what we're looking at is using cloud computing and distributing rich content and meaningful services at a scale entire cities will consume.

"Collaboration is part of our DNA and we will be bringing research to the world from behind the firewall and we'll definitely be using the Exemplar Network," said Mac Aonghusa.

Fibre networks in Ireland

Two other key international fibre networks have been converging on Ireland: first the €30m Project Kelvin transatlantic fibre network built by Hibernia Atlantic that comes ashore at Portrush and connects Ireland with North America; and second a €15m fibre network being built by Celtix Connect that will link Dublin's East Point with Holyhead and beyond into London's financial districts and Europe.

"The advantage of the Exemplar initiative is the low latency that internet providers will gain and this will be key to investment," explained Diane Hodnett, director of Celtix Connect.

"To see the Government take the initiative shows the seriousness of Ireland becoming a digital economy."

Last December, in a little Dingle church, rock band Snow Patrol gave an intimate performance that was transmitted via a fibre ring using the Exemplar technology to multiple HD screens, iPhones and laptops in the adjoining village.

The promoter of 'Other Voices', Philip King, explained: "This technology will be necessary for Ireland to be considerable in the world. Operating in the cultural space makes us considerable. People take us seriously because we are the best in the world at this and Irish music has always collided with technology, especially when you consider Irish music being recorded in America for the first time more than a century ago."

King said the dividends for the arts world from investment in the Exemplar can be several. "It's about our self worth and our ability to take on the best. If we can find a way of joining the brains, the genius and the know-how to technology, arts and the cultural sector we could create something unique in terms of tradition, translation and transmission."

The Arts Exemplar Network

Patrick Sutton of the Gaiety School of Acting is the driving force behind the creation of an Arts Exemplar Network and the refurbishment of the Smock Alley Theatre that was first established in Ireland 348 years ago and which will reopen next March.

"There's a heartbeat and real-life aspect to this because people are key to developing content," Sutton said. "This is significant for the story Ireland has to tell and significant for the world.

"The thousands of new jobs are certain, but people must realise that generating content for their channel, generating that content and ensuring people can see it and maximise it is key. When people realise that generating content for their channel, the primary school, the football club or so Smock Alley can use it and access it is extraordinarily exciting."

The CEO of Intune Networks, Tim Fritzley explained: "There is a unique opportunity for the island of Ireland. When you look at what's happening with Celtix Connect going across to the UK and Project Kelvin going to the US, the Exemplar is what's going to connect all of that together. In terms of the content distribution and creation, it comes together in a unique way that no one else in the world will have.

"What's interesting is we just had a large European telecoms carrier in and they told us that 95pc of their traffic is video based and of that 90pc of that should be within a region, but today because of way it is operating users go all the way to the US and back again to watch a single video.

"The reason for that is the current networks in regions aren't set up to handle how video and web services are being accessed through mobile or fixed broadband. You'll need Exemplar technology to handle that as you go forward," Fritzley explained.

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Saturday, July 17, 2010

Intune's Exemplar Network and The Future of the Internet...

The Exemplar Network...


The Future of the Internet...

Friday, July 16, 2010

State invests €5m as innovative Irish research heralds 'future of internet' - Irish Times


MINISTER FOR Communications Eamon Ryan yesterday unveiled a €5 million investment in internet technology developed in Ireland that will bring 140 new high-end research jobs in the next year.

In a world’s first, the technology uses tuneable lasers instead of silicon chips to deliver data and will enable high-definition streaming of sports and movies to home computers and mobile phones.

It is the second phase of Government investment in the Exemplar programme, which solves the problem giants like ATT have been addressing for the last 10 years – congestion on the internet .

Developed by two UCD graduates at Intune Networks, it has the potential to carry the equivalent of London’s entire telephone network from just one small computer room in Dublin.

“This is a breakthrough moment for Ireland,” said Mr Ryan. “The future of the internet is here and it’s being developed in Ireland.”

He hopes it will act as a magnet for investment. More than 30 telecoms companies have already signed up to test the technology, including BT, Imagine and IBM.

One of the first companies planning to pilot the system for the public is Smock Alley Theatre, a 17th-century theatre in Temple Bar which will open again in March next year with international stars including Liam Neeson and Robert de Niro to perform.

Such is the incredible speed with which data can be transferred that that one of the creators of the technology, Tom Dunne, believes consumers will in future be able to run their own TV channels.

“Take social networking. People will be able to broadcast their own events to their friends and family,” he said.

It also unleashes the prospect of pay-as-you-go broadband rates and high-quality streaming of sports and movies onto phones.

“The opportunities are endless. we can see uses for teachers, social workers, businesses and the great thing is you will be able to decide exactly what quality broadband you want and for how long for and pay for just that. No more flat rates,” said Mr Dunne.

Exemplar works by solving the problem of costly bottlenecks caused by congestion at switches in the telephone network. The average internet connection involves 20 switches from home computer to host computer.

The first live network was switched on by Mr Ryan yesterday at Parkwest Business Centre in west Dublin and a full-scale ring around Dublin will be built for further testing in 2011 with a view to rolling out a national test bed in 2012.

The technology, which is locked down with 16 patents, is being made available to any company worldwide for trial purposes. Normally companies developing technology do it in private and use it to leverage competitive advantage.

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Thursday, July 15, 2010

Exemplar Network Launch - RTE 6 ONE News


(Clip from RTE 6 ONE News)

Ireland’s next big thing - the Exemplar Network - Silicon Republic


Video

Exactly a year on, Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources Eamon Ryan TD has committed a further €5m to the next two phases of the Exemplar Network which will see the Exemplar Network grow from circling Dublin in the second phase to being a nationwide entity by the third phase in 2013.

Ryan said the first phase of the Exemplar Network, in which the State invested €10m with Intune Networks, has already created 140 jobs and that by the time of the third phase thousands of jobs, from digital media to high-end computing, green tech and life sciences, could be created as organisations will be attracted by the speed and capability of the network.

The first phase of the Exemplar Network, the Exemplar Testbed, located at Intune’s headquarters in Park West in Dublin, has a capacity of 2.5 terabytes – remarkable when you consider that this is twice the volume of traffic that the current London phone system carries.

The network heralds an era of virtualisation of fibre networks, using colour coding to enable multiple fibre providers to serve businesses and homes, often on a single strand of fibre. 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.



Organisations drawn to Exemplar Network
Today, it emerged that already 30 international companies and research bodies have expressed an interest in testing new products on the network, including BT, Imagine, EMC, Celtix Connect, IBM, ESB Telecom, Opennet, Firecomms, DCU, UCD, NUI Galway, UCC Tyndall and Science Foundation Ireland.

The second phase of the Exemplar Network, which kicks off in 2011, will consist of an active test ring around the Dublin metropolitan area. Organisations will be able to deploy their products to the market and test them in real-life scenarios. This will particularly involve major universities and research groups from the global and local technology and telecoms industries.

The final layer of the network, Phase 3, will kick off in 2013 and will be complete by 2020. This will exist as a national network for R&D or could also be used as a next-generation optical network that would be open to all carriers.

“The Exemplar Network will represent a quantum leap in the handling of data,” Ryan said this morning. “The price of data traffic will be coming down while speeds increase, so we need a quantum leap to overcome bottlenecks.”

Ryan said the potential of the technology to be severely disruptive is guaranteed and of global consequence. “Remember, this was a technology designed in Dublin, built in Cork and is an appropriate leap forward for the global internet, providing open access that is local to everyone.

“There is huge potential in creating jobs through a technology that we developed here in this city, and companies and research bodies will come here to test and develop on it. The reason why we made this investment was to give real confidence and point out that we have this capability and we have skills that are world class.

“This is also a green technology – it is capable of carrying twice the volume of traffic that London phone systems carry.

“We stand on the cusp of creating a high quality, world-leading infrastructure that could create thousands of new jobs,” Ryan said.

Venture capital investment raised by Intune
Intune has in the past year raised more than €25m in venture capital investment, including a €22m round led by Dermot Desmond and Kernel Capital, as well as recently a €3m round led by Novusmodus. Intune co-founder John Dunne told Siliconrepublic that the company now has 33 patents.

The company recently expanded into the US, with the opening of a Boston office and was awarded a major EU contract as part of a consortium involving telecom players Telefónica and PrimeTel under the EU 7th Framework.

Exactly a year ago, Ryan, at the publication of six-point action plan for the smart economy, contracted Intune to trial its technology here first before it hits mass manufacture. The solution – the Exemplar Network – could sort out the country’s broadband woes and catapult Ireland to the cutting edge of telecoms before anybody else. The move will grow Intune from 100 workers in Dublin and Belfast today to employing an additional 300 people over the next three years.

Intune CEO Tim Fritzley said he believes the Exemplar Network could help transform Ireland from a manufacturing and agricultural society to a high-end purveyor of ICT. “One of the biggest telecoms carriers in the world could come here and build a proprietary closed lab. But now, by having a facility like this Ireland could become an open place for the global carriers to base their labs. This will be a magnet for creating the jobs of the future.”

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€5m more for high-speed data network - RTE One News

RTE ONE NEWS:

(Video)

RTE Radio ONE News:


A new Irish-developed technology will enable companies to transfer data and images in a way that is faster, more secure and of a higher quality.

That is according to the Minister for Communications Eamon Ryan, who launched a new fibre optic network this morning.

The Exemplar network aims to solve the problem of costly bottlenecks of data. The first phase of the network is now up and running in its test facility in Parkwest, Dublin. The technology involved was developed by Irish company Intune Networks.

The Government has already invested €5m in the network, and Minister Ryan said today he intended to provide another €5m, which would lead to 140 jobs.

More than 30 companies and institutions have signed up to use the Exemplar network to test their products and services and conduct research. The companies include BT, Imagine, EMC and IBM, while four universities - UCC Tyndall, NUI Galway, UCD and DCU - will also use the facility, as will Science Foundation Ireland.

Phase 2 of the project involves the construction of a test ring around the Dublin metropolitan area and will start next year. The final phase, beginning in 2013, will see the Exemplar as nationwide infrastructure.

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The Irish Government launches Exemplar Network...

30 companies line up to use the high-speed, high-quality digital network 140 jobs to come from Phase I alone “The future of the internet is here” – Minister Ryan

Communications Minister Eamon Ryan today switched on the Government’s Exemplar Network. This is globally unique fibre-optic communications network using patented Irish technology which allows for the high-speed and high-quality transfer of electronic data.

Traffic on the internet is doubling every 2 years. The Exemplar Network solves the problem of costly bottlenecks of data, opening up a world of possibilities for future applications on the internet.

Last July the Government launched its ‘Technology Actions to Support the Smart Economy’ report. This ground-breaking report included 6 actions to help Ireland jump ahead of our competitors in the digital economy. One of the actions promised was the development of the Exemplar Network. Today, Phase I of the Exemplar is up and running in its test bed facility in Parkwest, Dublin.

The Government has already invested €5 million in the network. Today, Minister Ryan announced his intention to provide a further €5 million in additional investment.

Over 30 companies and institutions have signed up to use the Exemplar network to test their products and services and conduct research. These include: BT, Imagine, EMC, Celtix Connect, IBM, Smart Telecom, e|Net, Opennet, ESBTelecom and Firecomms. Four of Ireland’s universities UCC Tyndall, NUI Galway, UCD and DCU will use the facility, as will Science Foundation Ireland.

The Exemplar Network can be used to create virtual data centres and to facilitate cloud computing. High quality data and image transfer also allows for multi-site simultaneous broadcast of arts events. The Exemplar technology was used to broadcast a Snow Patrol concert in St. James’ Church in Dingle last year with a live, high definition stream to a number of locations. Many of the applications of this network are as yet unknown.

“The future of the internet is here”, said Minister Ryan, “and it’s being developed in Ireland”.

“There are those who believe Governments are not innovators, that we are technology takers, not leaders. Today, they would see gathered in one room leading international businesspeople, academics and artists. Everyone here today understands that this is a breakthrough moment for Ireland.


This Government identified cutting-edge technology with the potential to transform the internet. We invested in it and ensured it was available on an open access basis for all to use. Such is the interest from industry and the arts, today I can say that we are investing an additional €5 million in the Exemplar, which will create 140 jobs in the short term. The further phases of this project have the potential to create thousands more.


The new economy is digital, green and smart. The Exemplar network is all of these and with human ingenuity its future applications are endless”.

Phase II involves the construction of an active test ring around the Dublin metropolitan area and will commence next year. The final Phase beginning in 2013 will see the Exemplar as nationwide infrastructure.

Tim Fritzley, CEO, Intune Networks, the developers of the technology said: “The launch of the Test Bed marks a significant milestone in the Exemplar project and we are proud that the Test Bed has been built on Intune’s high performance optical packet switch and transport platform - Verisma.

“With the Test Bed complete the opportunity now exists for leading companies, academic institutions and arts based organisations, amongst others, to begin to develop on the network. This early test work will happen while phase one of the project continues with the Exemplar Network being built out in the Dublin region. The early commitment from an impressive range of leading organisations at this early stage of the project underscores the potential impact of the Exemplar Network.”

Brian O’Donoghue, Managing Director of Imagine Communications Group said, “WiMax and Exemplar can create a partnership to propel Ireland towards new job creation by inward investments and enable operators to set up world class businesses across Ireland. We are now witnessing Ireland’s transformation to the forefront of the digital technology revolution”.

Diane Hodnett, Managing Director of Celtix Connect said, “The future of the internet is about low latency, i.e. speed, driven by consumers requiring real time information, communicating in real time and using speed as a competitive advantage to conduct business. The environment and service providers who can deliver on this will be at the forefront of a truly digital economy. The deployment of the Exemplar network, coupled with the new CeltixConnect sub-sea cable, will deliver on this and will foster a massive growth in technology based industries and employment, be they content, media or financial, with Ireland as the hub. This is a ground-breaking development which must be applauded and driven by service providers and government alike to promote at home and abroad”.

Philip King, presenter of Other Voices said of the Snow Patrol streaming in Dingle, “The content delivery over the optical burst packet switched fibre network guaranteed uninterrupted premium quality content – something which was previously unachievable. The establishment of the Exemplar Network will allow Other Voices in 2010 to expand the delivery of high quality content directly to consumers outside of the Dingle area.”

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Smart Network to be Launched - Irish Examiner


Smart network could create thousands of jobs, says Minister

A new Smart network, a technology for high speed communications, could create thousands of jobs, it was claimed today.

The Minister for Communications Eamon Ryan is due to announce details of testing the new technology this morning.

The Smart network would involve a single infrastructure for all digital communications.

Multinational and Irish IT and entertainment companies will be involved in the testing and subsequent roll-out of the network.

Eighty jobs will be created in the first phase, with thousands more coming on stream with the eventual roll-out across the country.

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Friday, July 2, 2010

Intune Networks gets €3m ESB Novusmodus investment...


Energy fund ESB Novusmodus has invested €3 million in Dublin-based Intune Networks.

The company, which develops high-performance laser technology for the telecoms industry, recently raised €22 million in a funding round that will be used develop and commercialise its optical data switch technology.

Intune has developed a technology known as optical packet switch and transport (OPST), which allows more traffic to be sent over existing fibre-optic networks using different coloured lights and better utilises the network's capability.

The technology is expected to help solve traffic bottleneck issues for telecoms carriers, and also uses less energy, meaning it has a lower carbon footprint than other internet technologies.

“Intune Networks’ revolutionary technology has the potential to transform the way that carriers operate their metro networks, solving bandwidth problems at the same time as halving their energy consumption," said Novusmodus’ John McKiernan.

Intune is currently involved in building the platform for the Government’s €5 million Exemplar Network, which will be used as a test bed that will allow companies to trial high speed network applications.

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