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Cereva Details Storage Switch: Page 2 of 3

Cereva says the prototype, which targets Web hosting companies, is in trials with GiantLoop Network Inc., Mirror Image Internet, Navisite Inc., and StorageNetworks Inc. (Nasdaq: STOR) -- none of which could be reached for comment at press time. General shipment is slated for spring.

"The scale of Cereva's product is vastly different from anything out there," says Arun Taneja, senior editor at Enterprise Storage Group, a consultancy. "To get the same functionality in products today, you'd have to glom together multiple switches, routers, and high-end storage systems."

Cereva's initial Internet Storage system will offer only Fibre Channel connectivity, restricting its use to carriers that already support Fibre Channel SANs. Spokepeople say Sonet and gigabit Ethernet links will ship sometime during the second half of 2001. But questions remain about whether Cereva will support DWDM (dense wavelength-division multiplexing) as a future option at all.

This could make Cereva's box a second choice to some emerging competition, at least for certain types of carriers. Rival storage startup TrueSAN Networks Inc. (see Startups Ready Big SAN Switches), for example, claims its Paladin server now contains ATM (asynchronous transfer mode), Ethernet, and 16-channel DWDM connectivity as well as Fibre Channel. That could make TrueSAN's product more attractive to metropolitan CLECs and BLECs who are more interested in offering customers immediate Internet Web access, rather than Web hosting or massive data storage.

For its part, Cereva says it will offer more reliability, scalability, and carrier-specific features, including full fault tolerance of all elements, than any of its competitors -- TrueSAN included. But customers will pay a premium: Specially designed parts will pump up the price of Cereva's box. "Carriers will spend a quarter to a half million to buy into our design," says a Cereva spokesperson. In contrast, TrueSAN has said its platform will be based on ASICs and OEM'd parts, making it cheaper. Of course, TrueSAN's productis only starting to ship and Cereva's isn't out yet, so comparisons are educated guesses at best.