* C-COR reports increased sales and profits
C-COR continued its march away from the red ink of 2006, reporting that net sales for its second quarter (ending Dec. 29) were $80.1 million, compared to $66.7 million in the same period last year. That also represented a sequential increase from Q1 sales of $69.6 million. Net income in Q2 was $5.9 million, compared to a net loss of $15.7 million last year, and a first quarter gain of $1.6 million. The company said it anticipates that net sales for the third quarter will be between $75 million and $80 million.
* AT&T DSL now available through Amazon.com
People who want to subscribe to AT&T Yahoo! High Speed Internet can now do so through Amazon.com. Amazon.com launched a new storefront specifically to sell AT&T’s DSL services. As a promotion, the two are giving reward cards of $25 for orders of Express service and $75 for subscriptions to the Pro and Elite tiers.
* Juniper, Intelliden enhance IPTV, multiplay service delivery
Juniper Networks and Intelliden are putting together the former’s Service Deployment System (SDX-300) platform and the latter’s Dynamic Resource Provisioning system to create what they’re calling a “Dynamic Network Automation solution for high-bandwidth IP services.” The products combine to create a policy and real-time network resource management solution that will help communications service providers deliver broadband services with enhanced quality of experience (QoE), greater service reliability and higher scalability, while containing operational costs. The pair said that Telus, a customer of both companies, anticipates deploying the joint solution in its network.
* AudioCodes, FaxBack partner on IP fax solution
VoIP specialist AudioCodes and FaxBack said they’ve tested and assured compatibility between the latter’s NET SatisFAXtion 8.1 and the former’s TrunkPack PCI and cPCI form factor SIP media gateway products. The two products together are the basis for high performance and scalable fax solutions in situations where users need to retain their existing PSTN infrastructure and avoid purchasing dedicated fax blades.