Bay Networks Explained

Bay Networks, Inc.
Type:Public
Fate:Acquired by Northern Telecom
Successor:Nortel Networks
Foundation:July 1994
Industry:Telecommunications
Members:Dave House, Ex-CEO
Products:Router Products Technology, Network Management, Remote Access Servers, Internet/Intranet CPE & Applications, Data Over Cable Products, Digital Signal Processing Technology
Area Served:Worldwide

Bay Networks, Inc., was a network hardware vendor formed through the merger of Santa Clara, California, based SynOptics Communications and Billerica, Massachusetts based Wellfleet Communications on July 6, 1994.[1] SynOptics was an important early innovator of Ethernet products, having developed a pre-standard twisted pair 10 Mbit/s Ethernet product and a modular Ethernet hub product that dominated the enterprise networking market. Wellfleet was an important competitor to Cisco Systems in the router market, ultimately commanding up to a 20% market share of the network router business worldwide. The combined company was renamed Bay Networks, as SynOptics was based in the San Francisco Bay Area and Wellfleet in Greater Boston, nearby to Massachusetts Bay.

Acquisitions

Bay Networks expanded its product line both through internal development and acquisition, acquiring the following companies during the course of its existence:[2]

Acquisition by Nortel

Bay Networks was acquired by Northern Telecom in June 1998 for US$ 9.1 billion,[7] broadening Nortel's reach from its traditional carrier customer base into enterprise data networking. Reflective of this expanded product set and market, Nortel renamed itself Nortel Networks after the merger. In December 2009, as part of its bankruptcy proceedings, Nortel sold its Enterprise Networking equipment and software business to Avaya. The sale included a few remaining Bay Networks products that were still active in Nortel's portfolio at the time of the sale, such as the Ethernet Switch 450 and Backbone Concentrator Node (BCN) router.[8]

The Bay Networks product Small office/home office line survives to this day as the Netgear products that are widely sold by electronics retailers. Example products include Gigabit Ethernet switches, cable modems, print servers, and similar inexpensive, consumer-oriented networking equipment. Bay Networks had originally launched Netgear as a product line/division in January 1996, but the product line was not core to the newly formed Nortel Networks operations and so was spun out as a standalone company in September 1999.[9]

Notes and References

  1. News: Wellfleet and Synoptics Plan $2.7 Billion Computer Union . The New York Times . John . Markoff . July 6, 1994 . April 26, 2010.
  2. Web site: Bay Networks, Inc. - 1998 (Now Nortel). 1998.
  3. News: Jones. Dow. 1995-05-11. COMPANY NEWS; BAY NETWORKS PLANS A $140 MILLION ACQUISITION. en-US. The New York Times. 2021-08-03. 0362-4331.
  4. News: Bay Networks Acquire Armon Networking . Eshel . Tamir . 1996-07-29 . Globes.
  5. News: 1998-07-08. Bay Networks Acquisition. en-US. The New York Times. 2021-08-03. 0362-4331.
  6. Web site: Bay to acquire NetServe. 2021-08-03. CNET. en.
  7. Web site: US Report: Nortel buys bay, creates 17B networking titan.
  8. News: Nortel Completes Sale of Substantially All of Enterprise Solutions Business to Avaya . Nortel Networks . 2009 . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20100207232807/http://www2.nortel.com/go/news_detail.jsp?cat_id=-8055&oid=100263855&locale=en-US . 2010-02-07 .
  9. Web site: Nortel Networks Spin-Off NETGEAR to Focus on High-Growth Home and Small Business Internet Infrastructure Market. 2008-01-15. https://web.archive.org/web/20110717204639/http://files.shareholder.com/downloads/NTGR/219363835x0x92073/cde45f26-b75c-4efc-9962-9b2c95b1be5e/118724.pdf. 2011-07-17. dead.