MetaSwitch Takes the Lead in Enabling CLECs to Migrate to Facilities-Based Networks Following FCC Ruling; Since UNE-P Rules Change, MetaSwitch Has Powered the Migration of 42 CLECs with 3.7 Million Lines.ALAMEDA, Calif. -- Steep rate hikes will be a reality for many American businesses and consumers following a controversial Federal Communications Commission Federal Communications Commission (FCC), independent executive agency of the U.S. government established in 1934 to regulate interstate and foreign communications in the public interest. ruling that took effect on March 11. The FCC (1) (Federal Communications Commission, Washington, DC, www.fcc.gov) The U.S. government agency that regulates interstate and international communications including wire, cable, radio, TV and satellite. The FCC was created under the U.S. decision, first announced in 2004, alters the rules under which competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs) order and pay for services leased from incumbent local exchange carriers (ILECs). Now, competitive carriers who had been reselling ILEC (Incumbent Local Exchange Carrier) A traditional local telephone company such as one of the Regional Bell companies (RBOCs). Contrast with CLEC. See ELEC and TELRIC. services at advantageous rates must either pay much higher rates to ILECs, or migrate customers to their own facilities-based networks. MetaSwitch, a leading vendor of next generation carrier switching and applications solutions, revealed today that it has enabled more than 40 CLECs, currently serving in excess of 3.7 million subscriber lines, to migrate off the ILEC's switching platform. The FCC ruling, which ended the former UNE-P UNE-P Unbundled Network Element - Platform (unbundled network element Unbundled Network Elements (UNE) are a requirement mandated by the United States Telecommunications Act of 1996. They are the parts of the telecommunications network that the incumbent local exchange carriers (ILECs) are required to offer on an unbundled basis. - platform) tariffs, is an intensely debated one. In most cases CLECs can continue to use the ILEC's "last mile" local loops, but they will no longer have the right to lease ILECs' Class 5 switching facilities. This has prompted CLECs to deploy their own equipment during the past year - and that's where MetaSwitch comes in. To date, 42 CLECs have put contingency plans in place prior to the March 11 deadline, leveraging technology and expertise from MetaSwitch. These companies include Valtech of Reynoldsburg, Ohio Reynoldsburg is a city in Fairfield, Franklin, and Licking counties in the U.S. state of Ohio. The population was 32,069 at the 2000 census; a 2006 estimate reported a population of 33,076. , Planet Access of Lathrup Village, Michigan Lathrup Village is a city in Oakland County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 4,236 at the 2000 census. Demographics As of the census2 of 2000, there were 4,236 people, 1,621 households, and 1,207 families residing in the city. , and American Broadband and Telecommunications of Sylvania, Ohio Sylvania is a city in Lucas County, Ohio, United States. The population was 18,670 at the 2000 census. Sylvania is a middle-class suburb of Toledo. Geography Sylvania is located at (41.711450, -83. . "The MetaSwitch team worked with our company to develop an affordable and effective means to transfer our existing customers off the ILEC platform and onto our MetaSwitch," said Jeffrey Ansted, president of American Broadband and Telecommunications, a local provider of unlimited telephone service and Internet access See how to access the Internet. for homes and small businesses in northwest Ohio Northwest or northwestern Ohio consists of multiple counties in the northwestern corner of the US state of Ohio. This area borders Lake Erie, southern Michigan, and eastern Indiana. Some areas in northwestern Ohio are also considered the Black Swamp area. and southeast Michigan. "This will not only position us to meet all of the FCC time-tables, it will also drive higher margins throughout our installed base of 'on-net' customers. Our MetaSwitch will allow us to offer next generation IP and switched-based vertical services, not currently available in our markets, to further differentiate us from our competition." CLECs have turned to MetaSwitch, calling the company's IP Multimedia Subsystem An integrated network for telecommunications carriers that uses the IP protocol as its foundation for packetized voice, video and data. Supporting voice over IP (VoIP) in all its flavors (SIP, H.323, MGCP, etc. (IMS (1) See IP Multimedia Subsystem. (2) (Information Management System) An early IBM hierarchical DBMS for IBM mainframes. IMS was widely implemented throughout the 1970s under MVS and continues to be used under z/OS. ) switching and applications solutions "key" to the cost-effective migration from UNE-P. MetaSwitch's Class 5 softswitches are particularly suited for CLECs, with support for legacy and packet-based interfaces, feature equivalence with ILEC Class 5 switches, and approval to collocate col·lo·cate v. col·lo·cat·ed, col·lo·cat·ing, col·lo·cates v.tr. To place together or in proper order; arrange side by side. v.intr. To occur in a collocation. in ILEC central offices. MetaSwitch softswitching solutions also scale from a few hundred to millions of subscribers in both integrated and distributed configurations. "In today's regulatory environment, it's mandatory for leading providers of carrier-class telephony equipment, such as MetaSwitch, to help customers anticipate and prepare for ongoing rules changes," said Andy Randall, MetaSwitch Vice President of Marketing. "Over the past three years we have enhanced our product in several ways specifically to enable UNE-P migration, in line with our tradition of anticipating change and offering customers viable, cost-effective technology solutions. This is just one of the many reasons that communications leaders - from traditional carriers to pure-play VoIP providers - are realizing the value that MetaSwitch delivers." Historically, MetaSwitch CLEC (Competitive Local Exchange Carrier) An organization offering local telephone service that is not one of the traditional telephone companies. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 allowed competition to the incumbent telcos (ILECs), enabling new companies (CLECs) customers have been deploying many new applications - IP Centrex, VoIP, wireless (WIMAX) and more nationwide - in businesses and homes, from small communities in the Midwest to large metropolitan areas. Planet Access, for instance, has a relationship with US Signal, a provider with 6,000 miles of transport across 15 metropolitan areas in the Midwest. US Signal is providing backbone transport across its fully redundant, SONET protected, fiber optic network, as well as OnNet access to over 60 Points of Presence in five states. In addition, Planet Access is benefiting from MetaSwitch's alliances with Cisco and Occam; together with its partners, MetaSwitch is working to build an entire end-to-end IP network for Planet Access. Valtech is migrating from UNE-P to WIMAX using Alvarion gear to bypass the local RBOC (Regional Bell Operating Company) The Bell telephone companies that were spun off of AT&T by court order in 1984 (the Divestiture). Also known as the "Baby Bells," the initial seven RBOCs were Nynex, Bell Atlantic, BellSouth, Southwestern Bell, US West, entirely. MetaSwitch has helped such CLECs bypass RBOCs, taking them "out of the loop" and giving CLECs access to local lines controlled by RBOC monopolies. Basically, MetaSwitch facilitates the transition to IP/packet-based switching and reduces network operating costs, removing dependence on RBOCs. Also, MetaSwitch, with a flexible IMS-ready architecture for migration to next generation networks, enables voice services over WIMAX, a wireless broadband access technology that avoids local loop charges imposed by the incumbent exchange carriers. Rather than relying on copper wire, a company can access voice and data services via a WIMAX connection to a data center that has a fiber optic connection to the Internet or IP backbone. The result: wireless access, saved time and money. About MetaSwitch MetaSwitch is an industry-leading vendor of IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) switching and applications solutions for both packet and circuit-switched networks. Its widely deployed call agent, media/signaling gateway and application server platform supports a full range of legacy Class 4/5 capabilities and hosted unified communications services, and scales from a few hundred to millions of subscribers in both integrated and distributed configurations. Customers include incumbent and competitive local exchange carriers, as well as operators of broadband wireless, cable and fiber networks. MetaSwitch is a division of established telecom technology provider Data Connection. The company is consistently profitable and privately held, with main US offices in California and Virginia, and European headquarters in London, UK. Data Connection and MetaSwitch are trademarks of Data Connection Limited and Data Connection Corporation. Brands and products referenced herein are the trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders. Copyright (C) 2006 Data Connection Limited |
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