eGov-Jan-2011-[50-51]-Many Old Installations Would Be Revamped This Year To Support New Apps-Debraj

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in person

Debraj Dam

Vice President—Strategic Business and Partner Alliance, Digilink

“Many old

installations would be revamped this year to support new apps”

W

hat were the trends in network and structured cabling in 2010 and what is expected in 2011?

Digilink is a well recognised brand in the structured cabling market, and provides an entire range of structured cabling solutions for enterprises and small and medium business. Its basket of offerings also includes the indigenously designed and developed VoIP and suite of Layer 3 products to suit the unique characteristics of various markets. Debraj Dam, Vice President— Strategic Business and Partner Alliance, Digilink, speaks to Prachi Shirur of eGov magazine on trends in the Indian networking and structured cabling market and how the company is addressing the government segment in the country.

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egov / www.egovonline.net / January 2011

Calendar year 2010 started with a big change in the cabling domain, after the new standard ANSI/EIA/TIA 568-C.0 was ratified in June 2009. The use of lower bandwidth (10/100Mbps) cabling got replaced by 1G and 10G Ethernet. Now, with IEEE working on the 40G and 100G Ethernet, cabling market is looking forward to have 40G and 100G in place. Most of the old installations supporting lower bandwidths are expected to be revamped this year with those supported newer and higher bandwidths as the applications are becoming more and more demanding. In terms of fibre, OM4 was introduced in 2010 but the market started looking for OM4 cables in the last quarter of the year and is expected to capture big share in the data centre market segment. Data center is one of the fastest growing segments in today’s ICT technology space. It is generally believed that data creation and retention requirements in large enterprises are growing at 50 percent per year. This growth is due to a multitude of legislative and financial agreements in the United States and other

countries. These are dictating how much information must be stored, how it is stored, and for how long. For example, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act requires publicly held companies with a market capitalisation greater than $75 million to retain documents related to financial statements for seven years, effectively requiring top management to sign for the financial accuracy of the company’s annual reports, and being held accountable for the practices and procedures in their IT departments. The new Rule 17a of the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) establishes strict requirements for brokerages and stock exchange members. Under the new rule, a six-year retention period is required for transactions, e-mails and instant messages. These and other laws and international agreements have fuelled the growth in the network and structured cabling market.

How big is the global networking and cabling market and what are the figures for India? The global networking market is very huge and India’s share is very small, but in recent years we have observed that India’s share is increasing day by day. The increasing requirement of bandwidth, along with the office automation to be in line with world standards, has led to the market growth for SCS. The traditional way of crimping the cables is outdated as the industries are getting more updated with the tech-


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