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Tampa
Bay Region
Around
the World in a Nanosecond
Providing
its voice and data network for this year's Federation Internationale
de Football Association (FIFA) World Cup was a proving ground
for Basking Ridge, N.J.-based Avaya Inc. (NYSE:AV), including
its network operation center in St. Petersburg. Touted by
the firm as the world's largest con-verged voice and data
network, it linked 20 sports stadiums in Korea and Japan to
provide "mission-critical" functions such as stadium operations,
management of logistics for 32 teams, match statistics and
player information and materials inventory. The network provided
viewers along with athletes, coaches, officials and the
press the latest news, real-time scores, statistics and
video coverage from the matches.
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| More
than 10 terabytes of data the equivalent of half the
written material stored in the Library of Congress crossed
Avaya's network center in St. Petersburg during the World
Cup soccer games. |
In two
weeks of soccer matches alone, from May 31 to June 14, the
network carried nearly four ter-abytes of data. A terabyte
is equiv-alent to a thousand billion bytes (1,000 gigabytes).
The 10 terabytes of data the network carried for the duration
of the matches translates to six years and seven months of
continuous MP3 download-and-play music or half of the 24-million
volumes of material stored in the U.S. Library of Congress,
the largest library in the world.
This year's
World Cup was the first time a network for the event supported
simultaneous matches in two countries. Avaya's network included
40,000 connections among 20 stadiums, two international media
centers and two remote FIFA headquarters locations.
Statistics
on the network's performance during the games include "virtually
zero downtime" and a packet loss of less than 0.00001 percent.
The Avaya Web site (www.avaya.com) says that "is about the
same as reading today's editions of the Financial Times and
perhaps finding a missing period at the end of one sentence."
The network speed was 70 milliseconds or 7/100 of a second,
roughly the blink of an eye, between the Korea international
media center and the Japan center.
"We monitored
the entire World Cup network," says Joan Grohe, data services
staff director for Avaya in St. Petersburg. "We had a team
of 12 people from St. Petersburg in Korea and Japan. They
helped manage the international media centers. We had another
20 folks here who worked around the clock to support those
in-country folks."
Avaya
will provide these network services for FIFA's 2003 Women's
World Cup in China and the 2006 Men's World Cup in Germany.
More
Tech Transfer
Intelligent Micro Patterning LLC, a St. Petersburg technology
company, has come up with a way to circumvent an old process
for developing high-tech products such as micro chips.
Its technology
allows manufacturers to design products and then transfer
the designs from a computer directly to the final manufacturing
process. Intelligent's technology essentially replaces the
photo mask process for development of new products such as
microchips. A photo mask is akin to a stencil, where paint
is sprayed on the stencil, leaving the design behind.
The photo
mask process works. But it can take up to a month or more
to get a design finished. In comparison, Intelligent's process,
which uses optical technology, sends designs directly to the
building stage. Intelligent's technology is one more example
of how technology developed at the University of South Florida
has been "transferred" into an enterprise. "It allows a faster
time to market for products," says Jay Sasserath, chief executive
officer of Intelligent Micro Patterning. Sasserath is joined
in the business by David Fries, his partner and fellow founder.
The company is a startup. However, Sasserath says the potential
market for the technology "is huge." The name for its most
recent technology is the SF-100 maskless pho-tolithography
system, which uses Smart Filter technology.
Help
For Small Businesses
The University of South Florida's Small Business Development
Center (SBDC) wants you to know that it provides some inexpensive,
sometimes free, methods for entrepreneurs to start a business
and keep it going. To learn more about them, call 813/905-5800.
Or, email sbdc@coba.usf.edu. Its classes are offered at 1101
Channelside Dr., Room 111, at USF's Downtown Center in the
Tampa Port Authority building.
Tax
Software Online
The state Department of Revenue says it is making its tax
jurisdiction software available on the Internet at the following
site: http://geotax.state.fl.us/dorPubIdx.jsp People can download
county and state databases of address listings meant for tax
jurisdiction. The listing are part the state's way of complying
with the Mobile Telecommunications Sourcing Act, which in
a nut-shell is intended to determine the origination point
of cellular phone calls for tax purposes.
Harris
Wins Contracts
Harris Corp. (NYSE: HRS) says it has won a $43 million contract
from the federal government to help the U.S. Air Force Satellite
Control Network operate and maintain its commu-nications systems
in Colorado and California. The two key facilities mainly
monitor and posi-tion satellites, and also operate them while
they are in orbit. Harris says the contract contains options
valued at more than $355 million over the next seven years.
Harris,
which has headquarters in Melbourne (Fla.), is an international
communications equipment company focused on providing product,
system, and service solutions for commercial and government
customers. It operates five divisions that serve markets for
microwave, broadcast, network support, secure tactical radio,
and government communications systems. It employs more than
10,000 employees, including 4,000 engineers and scientists.
Harris
also recently won a $10 million contract from Lockheed Martin
Corp. to help build fiber optic transmitter and receiver units
for the Air Force's F-22 Raptor jet fighter pro-gram. Harris
says it expects that contract to grow to $23 million. It is
one of more than 100 Florida companies small and large helping
Lockheed Martin with the Raptor. The new jet fighter
Florida
Is Business Friendly
When it comes to providing a business climate that small businesses
consider "favorable," Florida ranks high fifth in the nation
according to a survey done by the Small Business Survival
Committee, a Washington group that monitors the 50 states'
business activities. (http://www.sbsc.org.)is designed for
stealth, speed and agility. It will replace the F-15 Eagle.
Rankings
are based on government costs that impact small business such
as personal and busi-ness taxes, property taxes, sales, gross
receipts and business taxes, death taxes, unemployment taxes,
health care costs and labor costs. Separately, Plants, Sites
& Parks magazine ranks Florida first in development of major
business projects that will attract new jobs. The magazine
surveyed 25 of the largest employment generating business
projects to come up with its rating. Florida had four of the
top 25 projects in the nation, according to the magazine.
The
report is called Small Business Survival Index 2002.
Here are the top five states:
1. South Dakota
2. Nevada
3. Wyoming
4. Texas
5. Florida
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Copyright
© Maddux Report L.C. 2002
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