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ÇöÀçÀ§Ä¡ : HOME > ¸®Æ÷Æ® > À¯/¹«¼±Åë½Å > ±¤Åë½Å/À§¼ºÅë½Å
New Revenue Opportunities for Optical Interconnects: A Market and Technology Forecast
¹ßÇà»ç CIR

¹ßÇàÀÏ 2010-05
ºÐ·®
¼­ºñ½ºÇüÅ Report
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The idea that boards and chips (or even devices on chips) could be interconnected with optics has excited the imagination of engineers for well over a decade. Start-ups have appeared with optical interconnection as their main focus only to disappear from the scene a year or so later. Established transceiver and semiconductor firms have also tried their hands at optical interconnection, but have generally abandoned or downsized projects after a short space of time.

Until very recently, optical interconnection has not portrayed itself as a good business to be in. Something has changed in the last year or so, however, and that is the size of the addressable market. Optical interconnection projects of the past have looked for initial revenues from the limited opportunities in supercomputers or in very high-end telecom gear. But, as Moore's Law has pushed VLSI ever forward, the addressable market for optical interconnects has expanded from a few niches to the giant market represented by corporate servers and large routers.

Many believe that within a few years processor speeds will reach a point where optical interconnects will be required in most standard business computers. Meanwhile, the recent introduction by Intel of its LightPeak technology has propelled optical interconnection from something that is little more than a topic for technical conferences to a potential, near-term revenue generator.

These encouraging signs are countered by the quite daunting challenges facing optical interconnection; primarily, that is, providing cost-effective optical technology in markets that are used to paying only minimal amounts for metal connectivity. There is also the issue of matching optical interconnect technologies to the fairly different needs of the chip-to-chip, board-to-board and on-rack interconnection. CIR expects proprietary solutions to these problems to create sustainable market advantages for firms in the emerging optical interconnection space.

There are also significant new business opportunities emerging for suppliers of optical interconnect technology, including firms with roots in the diode laser, active optical cabling, transceiver, and semiconductor industry. We also think that optical interconnection will be a key enabling technology for computer and telecom/datacom equipment firms, which will increasingly find that the speed of internal interconnection is limiting their success in deploying the latest processors.

With all this in mind, CIR is publishing this new report, which identifies where the opportunities are to be found in optical interconnection and quantifies how much those opportunities will be worth. We believe it will be invaluable reading for all firms for which optical interconnection is key to their business strategies.


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