SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Leadership >> Industry News

Canadian startup among ones to watch in 2008

Canadian startup among ones to watch in 2008

By:  Julie Bort  On: 30 Dec 2007 For: Network World (U.S.) Creator

Ten young companies offering innovative products to enterprises

Last year Network World designated more than 90 start-ups as worth watching. After a second look, we narrowed the list down to these companies – one Canadian and nine American - as newcomers offering offering agility, seamless integration and pervasive connectivity to enterprises.

NEWSTEP NETWORKS

Founded: January 2003

Headquarters: Toronto

What it offers: The Converged Services Node and other products that perform fixed mobile convergence (FMC). Comprising hardware and software, the company's systems offer a session brokering function that allows a call on a single device (such as a cell phone) to be handed off to Wi-Fi or vice versa. A call also can be transferred to a different device on a different network, for instance, linking traditional PBX calls to Wi-Fi handsets.

Why we like it: FMC allows companies to treat mobile phones like PBX extensions. NewStep gear expands connections to IP phones, softphones and other handheld devices, as well as traditional phones, without requiring a forklift of current hardware. Plus, NewStep says it supports Microsoft Live Communications Server, which means it doesn't simply route calls, but helps provide presence information for Microsoft Unified Communications shops. Since we first profiled the company in January, NewStep has been testing interoperability on a long list of technologies. These include tests of Code Division Multiple Access/Wi-Fi handsets with Kyocera Wireless, GSM/Wi-Fi handsets with Paragon Wireless, Linux handsets tests with E28, and dual- and multi-mode handsets with Hellosoft. It also has proved interoperability with IP PBXs from Asterisk, Avaya and Cisco.

How it got its start: Founders, who saw FMC technology as a "new step" for carrier voice services, spun the company out of Bell Canada to address the emerging market.

Management: The team includes CEO Neil Baimel, who is former CEO of Syndesis, maker of service-fulfillment software for service providers, and Lloyd Williams, vice president of engineering. Williams, formerly a researcher at Bell Canada, has authored more than 25 patents.

Funding: $27 million from Vengrowth Private Equity Partners, Newbury Ventures, BDC Venture Capital, B.E.S.T Fund and Bell Canada.

Who uses the product: Embarq, BT and Bell Canada, plus the company says enterprise customers in Europe are in various testing phases.

Interesting fact: NewStep has filed for more than 16 patents for its Converged Services Node software.

3LEAF SYSTEMS

Founded: June 2004

Headquarters: Santa Clara

What it offers: The V-8000 Virtual I/O server, an appliance that converts individual storage and networking interfaces from commodity x86 Windows/Linux servers into a single pool, operating on a 10G fabric.

Why we like it: The appliance makes virtual resources appear to servers as if they are locally attached, with full administrative support for network multipathing, port bonding and trunking. The appliance solves the I/O bottlenecks that occur as enterprises add more virtualized servers. "It's definitely a problem to scale up lots of virtual machines on a cluster and not be able to scale up the I/O at the same time. 3Leaf is addressing this," said John Abbott, chief analyst at The 451 Group in our original profile of the company in August. Since then, 3Leaf Systems has made solid progress. It signed on a new CEO, B.V. Jagadeesh, founder of Exodus Communications and former CEO of NetScaler. It joined the VMware Community Source program for closer collaboration with VMware on technology development. It launched provisioning software for its V-8000 Virtual I/O device and was named to a few more "best" lists like this one.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 1679   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Julie Bort Julie Bort is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

College offers BlackBerry certification
College offers BlackBerry certificationAs part of its network engineer diploma program, triOS Colleges are offering support and administrator courses for Research in Motion’s hardware. CATA’s president offers his take
Websense to take fear out of Facebook, Web 2.0
Websense to take fear out of Facebook, Web 2.0The company launches a gateway product at InfoSecurity Canada 2008 that is designed to scan sites in real time for potential threats against the enterprise. Among them: iGoogle pages
Network puts Windows Server 2008 to the test
Network puts Windows Server 2008 to the testThe latest Microsoft OS is put through its paces on a a Dell 1950 equipped with a dual quad-core 1.6GHz CPU, 32GB of dynamic RAM and two Broadcom Gigabit Ethernet network interface cards
We're dependent on the "Intermittantnet"
if you're wondering why there was a decrease in activity on the blogs today, it's because our network connection was down. and then

Comments (0)

No Comments!
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.