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Topic: Mukesh Chatter


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In the News (Fri 11 Dec 09)

  
  Optical Keyhole: Axiowave Networks interview
Chatter noted the fact that during the 9/11 disaster, despite the largely non-functional VoIP services in certain areas of the U.S., no IP SLAs were violated because carriers generally average service levels over their entire network and over a time period, so ironing out any localised or short-term service problems.
Chatter claimed, have identified the economic issues relating to IP networks, while others have not, but whatever the case, companies are unlikely to suddenly acknowledge that they have invested huge sums of money in infrastructure that is not generating a reasonable return.
Chatter emphasised that the latter issue is being addressed through the formation of partnerships with larger companies, notably memoranda of understanding with a Tier two carrier in Europe and a carrier in Asia.
www.opticalkeyhole.com /interviews/axiowave.asp   (3824 words)

  
 Networking veteran banks on need for speed | CNET News.com
Chatter, however, maintains he did not solicit his old Nexabit employees from Lucent and says the fact that he set up shop a block away from the large telecommunications equipment maker is simply a coincidence.
Chatter said he is hiring another 80 employees, mostly engineers, and hopes to announce hardware and software products by 2002.
Chatter disagrees with the notion that the Nexabit technology was faulty, saying the technology was fully ready at the time of the Lucent acquisition.
news.com.com /2100-1033-252796.html   (1147 words)

  
 Chatter Teeth -- Recommendations and Resources   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Mukesh Chatter is an alumni of the Birla Institute of Technology & Science, Pilani he founded NextaBITS and sold it to Lucent for $900 million.
right David Chatters (born April 15, 1946 in Westlock, Alberta) is a Canadian politician, represented the riding of Athabasca from 1993 to 2004 and currently representing the riding of Westlock—St. Paul (since the 2004 Federal Election) as a member of the Conservative Party of Canada.
Chatters, who was a farmer / rancher before entering politics, was first elected as a member of the Reform Party of Canada (1993-2000), which became the Canadian Alliance in 2000, which became the Conservative Party of Canada in 2003.
www.becomingapediatrician.com /health/30/chatter-teeth.html   (938 words)

  
 ZoomInfo Web Summary: Mukesh Chatter   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Mukesh Chatter, Founder, President and CEO Mukesh Chatter brings with him more than 18 years' experience in the architecture, design and development of state-of-the-art networking equipment and supercomputers and has several patents in these areas.
Chatter said the action was required to reduce the company's operating expenditures while additional financing was secured.
"The NX64000 is leading the packet switching revolution and positioning Lucent for leadership of the new millennium," said Mukesh Chatter, VP and GM of Lucent's Core Routing Technologies and former CEO and founder of Nexabit Networks.
www.zoominfo.com /directory/Chatter_Mukesh_75448624.htm   (327 words)

  
 Rediff On The NeT: The $900 Million Man Who Never Accepts 'No'
And indeed, Chatter has ''told them so.'' Chatter had worked long hours and weekends, pouring his heart and soul into the company, which aimed to top all current networking technologies.
Chatter and the Nexabit team have since basked in the accolades that came with achieving unprecedented speed with unconventional technology, which was a personal and professional triumph.
Chatter who was recently selected by The Red Herring magazine as one of the Top Ten Entrepreneurs of 1999, came to the US as an engineering student.
www.rediff.com /news/1999/sep/08us1.htm   (1257 words)

  
 Byte and Switch - Axiowave Queues in the Core - Storage Networking News Analysis
Axiowave was founded in 2000 by CEO Mukesh Chatter along with Chairman Ray Stata, who is also the chairman of Analog Devices Inc. (NYSE: ADI - message board).
Chatter 'n' Stata also teamed up to found Nexabit, sold in 1999 to Lucent Technologies Inc. (NYSE: LU - message board) for the now-legendary sum of $900 million.
Chatter says the company changed gears about two years ago, realizing the optical crossconnect market was not nearly as bright as the routing market.
www.byteandswitch.com /document.asp?doc_id=53659&site=supercomm   (1271 words)

  
 Campus.News: Features   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Mukesh Chatter '82, founder, president, and CEO of Axiowave, has been named the William F. Glaser '53 Rensselaer Entrepreneur of the Year by Rensselaer's Severino Center for Technological Entrepreneurship.
Prior to founding Axiowave, Chatter was the founder, president, and CEO of Nexabit Networks Inc, a highly successful terabit switch/router company that was acquired by Lucent Technologies in July 1999.
Chatter has a master's degree in computer and systems engineering from Rensselaer.
www.rpi.edu /web/Campus.News/sept_01/sept_10/home.html   (2018 words)

  
 Light Reading - Lucent - Axiowave Closes on $45M - Telecom News Analysis
Chatter says mum's the word on what Axiowave's product actually is. Up to now, the most the startup's revealed about its wares is that they are optically based.
In April 2002, Chatter confirmed the layoff of "under 30" employees as a result of discontinuing a project involving an ultra-dense optical crossconnect switch (see Stealthy Startup Leads With Layoffs).
Still, Chatter is confident enough in his company's "traction" with prospective customers to say he doesn't think Axiowave will need another major infusion of cash.
www.lightreading.com /document.asp?doc_id=27132   (901 words)

  
 Mukesh Chatter, CEO, Axiowave Networks
Mukesh Chatter founded Axiowave Networks four years ago with a goal of building optical cross connects, equipment that directs data streams between network components.
So Chatter, who had sold his previous startup, Nexabit, to Lucent for $900 million, set out to develop a core/metro router.
Chatter recently talked with internetnews.com about the challenges facing service providers, how Axiowave's product addresses them, and how a small company in Marlborough, Mass., plans to take on network equipment heavyweights.
www.internetnews.com /ent-news/article.php/3367241   (709 words)

  
 siliconindia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Chatter, an engineer with formidable credentials including stints working on a supercomputer project at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, contends that neither past successes nor failures can predict future successes or failures.
Chatter faced up to a lot of doubts from the industry, which questioned Nexabit router’s promised speeds of up to 160 times faster than the fastest router on the market (6.4 terabit-per-second-per-chassis).
Chatter maintained that nobody had a terabit router.
www.siliconindia.com /magazine/display_back_issue.asp?article_id=691   (556 words)

  
 Two terabit core routers ditch the unified chassis   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Chatter said carriers always have favored ATM and frame relay because their switch-based oversubscription models pose a profitable way of filling pipes.
The lesson Axiowave took from the recession is that carriers cannot make money by emphasizing best-effort IP traffic; they instead must concentrate on premium voice and low-latency data traffic, preserving all latencies for that traffic even in the presence of oversubscribed best-effort IP data.
The XCR128 will scale to multiple terabits, Chatter said, but its basic port granularity will be 10-Gbit OC-192, reflecting the popularity of that Sonet rate and its 10-Gbit Ethernet equivalent.
www.commsdesign.com /printableArticle?articleID=21400518   (984 words)

  
 Light Reading - IP & Convergence - Chatter's New Box - Telecom News Analysis
LAS VEGAS, NV--Last week, it emerged that Mukesh Chatter, the founder of Nexabit Networks and subseqently vice president and general manager of Lucent Technology Inc.'s http://www.lucent.com core routing technologies, was potentially lighting out of Lucent for his next venture.
A source within Lucent said Chatter will be joined at the new venture by his former founding partner at Nexabit, Ray Stata, who is also a founder and Chairman of Analog Devices Inc. http://www.analogdevices.com, adding weight to the deal.
A separate source outside of Lucent said that Mukesh Chatter had funded the company's first round of financing with his own money and that the new company is headquartered across the street from Nexabit offices in Marlborough, Mass.
www.lightreading.com /document.asp?doc_id=637&site=lightreading   (772 words)

  
 ISP-Planet - Equipment - Lucent NX64000
ccording to Mukesh Chatter, VP and General Manager of Lucent's Core Routing Division, the OC192 deployment would not have been possible without the NX64000.
Chatter pointed out that the NX6400 is a multi-service box: In addition to handling IP at OC192 speeds, it is "the fastest frame relay switch in existence."
Lucent anticipates the market for this class of switch/routing equipment to be in the range of $100s of millions to over $1 billion in the coming year.
www.isp-planet.com /equipment/lucent_nx64000.html   (439 words)

  
 RCNJ: Chatter Urges Entrepreneurs to Focus on Growing Revenues
Chatter Urges Entrepreneurs to Focus on Growing Revenues
On September 21, Mukesh Chatter '82 received the William F. Glaser '53 Rensselaer Entrepreneur of the Year Award from the Severino Center for Technological Entrepreneurship.
In a news report in this week's Campus.News, Chatter urged entrepreneurs to focus on growing revenues.
www.rcnj.org /2001/10/01/063232.html   (209 words)

  
 BITSAA Photo Gallery :: CEVC Meet in Boston with Mukesh Chatter - August 14, 2003
BITSAA Photo Gallery :: CEVC Meet in Boston with Mukesh Chatter - August 14, 2003
CEVC Meet in Boston with Mukesh Chatter - August 14, 2003
You can disable this functionality and this warning by setting session.bug_compat_42 or session.bug_compat_warn to off, respectively.
www.bitsaa.org /gallery/CEVCMukesh2003   (78 words)

  
 domain-B : business : infotech : IT news: Pride of place for Indians
Two Indians, Gururaj Deshpande and Mukesh Chatter have been named in the top 10 list of entrepreneurs, by the Red Herring magazine.
Mr Chatter is the co-founder of Nexabit networks, also based in Massachusetts.
Mr Chatter has over 15 years experience in designing and developing networking and telecom equipment besides supercomputers and algorithms where he has applied for several patents.
www.domainb.com /infotech/itnews/19990823indians.html   (242 words)

  
 IP: Invisible Profit?
Not much, according to Mukesh Chatter, CEO of Axiowave, a maker of core routers that claims set itself apart from the router pack through an ability to churn profits from IP by guarantee ATM- and TDM-like SLAs on premium (priced) services.
Currently, retail data services contracts are being renewed every two years at 1/3 the price of the previous contract, Chatter says.
Chatter says the price declines for IP are more dramatic because service providers have to create demand in order for users to deconstruct their point-to-point frame relay networks.
www.mail-archive.com /camp03@fesim.org/msg07376.html   (972 words)

  
 Nexabit Inc. lands $20M in financing - Boston Business Journal:   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Mukesh Chatter, Nexabit's co-founder and chief executive officer, compared the future move toward terabit technology to when radios made the jump from using vacuum tubes to transistors.
Chatter said two-year-old Nexabit has been in discussions to sell its technology and provide backbone support to the communication networks of New York-based ATandT Corp., Qwest Communications International of Denver, and Westwood, Kan.-based Sprint Corp. According to Chatter, Nexabit will begin shipping its products toward the end of this year.
Along with Chatter, the company's co-founders include Ray Stata, a founder and chairman of Norwood-based Analog Devices Inc., and Alex Dingee, a former venture capitalist.
www.bizjournals.com /boston/stories/1998/08/24/story6.html   (708 words)

  
 New contestant joins Terabit race   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Mukesh Chatter, founder and CEO of Nexabit Networks, pointed out that the company is pleased to receive such "high level support for our innovations?.
Chatter also said the funding is proof that the industry is ready for breakthrough core switching/routing technologies that will enable the next generation of Internet and carrier services.
Officials at the Massachusetts based firm said the company's routing switch will handle IP data packets directly at speeds similar to those of ATM, using packet-over-Sonet (synchronous optical network) technology.
www.vnunet.com /articles/print/2102175   (471 words)

  
 Business Communications Review Magazine - BCR eWeekly
With Cisco debuting its HFR router and Juniper managing to hold its own, the IP network core still looks like a two-horse race.
But that's not stopping Mukesh Chatter, who sold his previous core routing startup, Nexabit, to Lucent.
Michael and Bart delve into the nitty-gritty of the business case, but here's the bottom line: A study commissioned by Corning—which presumably would want to err on the side of favoring fiber deployment—showed that, best case, FTTH can be justified for 8 percent of the central offices serving 31 percent of U.S. households.
www.bcr.com /c/bcr_eweekly/6/72.htm   (357 words)

  
 Mukesh Chatter  |  September 1, 2004  |  Telecommunications Magazine
Just because everyone gets sorted into the proper line doesn’t mean they get the level of service they’ve paid for; it all depends on who’s actually behind the counter.
Telecom service providers face the same problem in providing class of service, notes Mukesh Chatter, co-founder, CEO and president of Marlborough, Mass.-based Axiowave Networks.
Having been in the networking business some 18 years, Chatter marvels at the changes that telecom in general has caused around the world.
www.telecommagazine.com /Americas/article.asp?HH_ID=AR_614   (715 words)

  
 domain - B : Indian business: News review : 23 August 1999 : people
San Francisco: Gururaj Deshpande, co-founder of Sycamore Networks and Mukesh Chatter, co-founder of Nexabit Networks, both based in Massachusetts, USA, have been named by Red Herring magazine in its list of top 10 entrepreneurs of 1999.
Besides Sycamore Networks, he had launched Coral Networks which was acquired by Synoptics (now Nortel) and Cascade Communications, which he sold to Ascend Communications of Alamdea, California.
Mr Chatter has over 16 years of experience in design and development of networking and telecommunications equipment, and super computers.
www.domainb.com /news_review/199908aug/19990823newsd.html   (357 words)

  
 IITBHF and IITBAA (http://www.iitbombay.org)
If Mukesh is a salesman par excellence, Satish is understatement personified.
The night the critical chip came from the foundry, Mukesh did not even want to be around, since that would have added to the tension.
He knew about Nexabit and once when he was visiting Boston, he and Mukesh discussed a particularly difficult problem Nexabit was facing.
www.iitbombay.org /misc/press/busindia01.htm   (9202 words)

  
 Stata, Chatter are teaming up again - Boston Business Journal:   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
MARLBOROUGH--A year after selling their company for nearly $1 billion, Mukesh Chatter and Ray Stata are back in business.
Whatever course taken by Chatter and Stata will be closely watched, given the triumph of their earlier collaboration.
That type of dramatic turn of events is not likely to recur with Axiowave, Chatter and Stata say.
www.bizjournals.com /boston/stories/2000/07/03/story4.html   (627 words)

  
 RedOrbit NEWS | OmniGuide Communications' Receives $450K in R&D grants from NIH and other government agencies   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Investors were Alliance Technology Ventures (ATV), 3i, as well as Ray Stata and Mukesh Chatter.
Stata and Chatter provided OmniGuide with its initial funding.
Based in Cambridge MA, where it has set up its corporate offices and labs, OmniGuide has an exclusive license from MIT on patents for the omnidirectional reflectors employed in its hollow core optical fibers.
www.redorbit.com /modules/news/tools.php?tool=print&id=13974   (296 words)

  
 Lucent Technologies to acquire Nexabit Networks, a leader in new high-speed core IP switching/routing industry; Nexabit ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
The joint work will enable Nexabit products to provide integrated switch routing of IP traffic directly onto a DWDM optical core network at an industry leading OC192 standard rate of 10 gigabits per second per wavelength.
Mukesh Chatter, CEO and founder of Nexabit, will join Lucent as Advanced IP Core Technologies Vice-President, in Lucent's InterNetworking Systems Group (INS).
"When we founded Nexabit, our goal was to deliver the leading multi-terabit-scale wide area networking products to unlock the raw bandwidth created by today's optical networking technologies," Chatter said.
www.lucent.com /press/0699/990625.coa.html   (1045 words)

  
 The Anchorman Says... - November 2005, 11
The other day, last Friday, I guess, there was a gathering for ex-employees of an ill-fated startup called Axiowave Networks, Inc. It was a Mukesh Chatter/Ray Stata company, backed by good money, staffed by good people, and it went over four years and then suddenly, one day, was shut off like a lightswitch.
You can argue about product quality, or marketing strategy, or whatever, but the bottom line is that a lot of people donated a lot of time to create a product that never existed in the end.
Ported to b2evolution by matt brotherson (brotherson.com)
www.peart.com /blogs/index.php?m=20051111   (439 words)

  
 The Hindu : `Steel king' to help set up Triple IT
The Institute -- or ``Triple I-T'' as it is referred to in official circles here -- was a concept that originated in the first International Rajasthani Conclave (IRC) here in September 2000.
Mittal, a non-resident Rajasthani and one of the members of the governing body of the Rajasthan Foundation set up at the IRC, came to the help of the State after another entrepreneur, Mukesh Chatter, found it difficult to accomplish the task he had taken upon himself.
All members of the governing board, which include eminent personalities like L.N. Singhvi, Raj Singh Dungarpur, D.R. Mehta, Admiral B.S. Shekhawat, Mohan Maharishi besides Ram Niwas Mirdha, Nawal Kishore Sharma and Murli Deora attended the first meeting of the board, held under the chairmanship of the Chief Minister, Ashok Gehlot, on Thursday.
www.hindu.com /thehindu/2002/04/01/stories/2002040103300500.htm   (485 words)

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