Alcatel-Lucent continues its strategic transition from a hardware-based networking vendor to one that offers cloud-based software.
To this end it is offering mobile operators virtualised network functions that can be accessed via the cloud.
The company wants to make it easier for mobile operators to embrace network-function virtualisation (NFV) as a way to more quickly spin out services and to lessen their reliance on proprietary hardware in their infrastructures. Alcatel-Lucent officials said the company is working with 20 service providers that are looking to use NFV technologies in their networks, and that the networking vendor’s efforts in this area will be a key part of its presence at the Mobile World Congress 2014, which starts 24 February in Barcelona, Spain.
Alcatel-Lucent’s portfolio of virtualised products, announced 19 February, include Evolved Packet Core (vEPC) for the automated authentication and management of subscribers and services on the network, and IP Multimedia Subsystem ( vIMS), a cloud-based communications platform for delivering rich multimedia over IP networks. In addition, the company will offer a virtualised version of its Radio Access Network (RAN) products, which includes a virtualised 3G radio network controller and a virtualised proof-of-concept for LTE and LTE-advanced radio access networks.
For mobile operators, which are under increasing demand for more services – from voice-over-LTE (VoLTE) to WebRTC for real-time communications to machine-to-machine communications – having a more flexible and programmable network can enable them to innovate more quickly and generate revenues more quickly.
“Each mobile operator will have different priorities and want to take their own specific path to NFV, based on their business priorities and the state of their network and operations readiness,” Marcus Weldon, corporate CTO for Alcatel-Lucent and president of Bell Labs, said in a statement. “Building on our strong IP foundation, we have pioneered an open SDN and NFV architecture that combines the best of IP with the best of IT, to create a truly carrier-grade cloud network solution.”
Alcatel-Lucent executives, under the direction of CEO Michael Combes, have been aggressively trying to transform the company, which has had financial bright spots since it was created in 2006 via a merger. The company last year announced The Shift Plan, designed to save $1.3 billion (£779m) in expenses and generate another $1.3 billion (£779m) by selling off various assets. Part of the transformation is a moving away from being a hardware provider and instead becoming more of a software vendor, similar to moves made by other networking vendors – including leader Cisco Systems – in recent years.
Alcatel-Lucent’s CloudBand 2.0 NFV platform, which is housed at the company’s Cloud Innovation Center in Illinois, was created to host and manage the virtualised applications. Officials are expanding the CloudBand platform to include greater network control and an adoption of more open industry standard technologies as well as virtualised network functions. The company also is integrating the Virtual Service Platform – which offers SDN solutions from Nuage Networks, a venture backed by Alcatel-Lucent – into CloudBand 2.0.
Alcatel-Lucent is using Red Hat’s Enterprise Linux OpenStack Platform as the common technology foundation for CloudBand, the companies announced 19 February. Alcatel-Lucent already has three customers under contract for CloudBand NFV and another 10 trials under way, the company said. It also has signed four contracts to deliver the Nuage SDN offering.
In addition, company officials announced that Alcatel-Lucent and China Mobile at the Mobile World Congress show will demonstrate the work they’ve done on developing NFV for mobile operators using Alcatel-Lucent’s services.
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Originally published on eWeek.
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