Solutions to help your business Sign up for our newsletters Join our Community
  • Share

Globalcomm: New start-up takes ROADM to the edge

CHICAGO--A new subsystem start-up is emerging from stealth mode at the Globalcomm trade show this week, proposing to take reconfigurable optical add/drop multiplexers (ROADM) from core and metro networks to the edge.

More on this Topic

Industry News

Blogs

Briefing Room

The new firm, Nistica, was formed with a recently closed $4 million round of funding and a group including former employees of Photuris, the ROADM vendor that was acquired two years ago by Mahi Networks, which was itself acquired by Meriton Networks last year.

Starting at Globalcomm, Nistica will begin selling a line of ROADM subsystems meant to live downstream from the ROADMs that today sit in core and metro networks. Like its predecessors, Nistica’s wavelength-selective switching ROADMs remotely reconfigure optical signals without the need for costly and time-consuming manual intervention--but they do it at the network edge, with lower capacity links.

“There’s a tremendous need for automating the edge of the optical network,” said Ashish Vengsarkar, Nistica’s chief executive officer. “There’s this huge gap in between the [passive optical network] area and the metro core.”

Nistica offers three ROADM subsystems for equipment vendors: the smallest, the Fledge Three, lets users start with just one wavelength and may be best suited to enterprise networks. The next largest, the Fledge Ten, is expected to be the most widely applicable, covering a “sweet spot” of four to eight wavelengths. The largest, the Full Fledge, can add or drop up to 16 wavelengths.

The gear is being trialed now by 10 equipment vendors, Vengsarkar said, and all three products will become generally available to equipment vendors in the fourth quarter. At that pace, vendors could begin introducing the gear to carriers next spring, he said.

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2012 Penton Media Inc.

Learning Library

Featured Content

A time and money saving approach to fiber deployment

Service providers are under tremendous pressure to turn up new services faster then before and, at the same time, to do it at less expense - and intra-office fiber is one of the biggest challenges in terms of both cost and service turn-up.

The Latest

News

From the Blog

Briefingroom

Join the Discussion

Resources

Get more out of Connected Planet by visiting our related resources below:

Connected Planet highlights the next generation of service providers, as well as how their customers use services in new ways.

Subscribe Now

Back to Top