Aruba Acquires Outdoor Wireless Mesh Specialist

Founded in 2005, Azalea is based in Milpitas, Calif., and according to Aruba did about $5 million in revenue in 2009. It does have U.S. and European customers and channel partners, but Azalea does the majority of its business -- about 100 of its 140 current customers -- in Asia, specifically China, said Michael Tennefoss, head of strategic marketing for Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Aruba.

"It allows Aruba's partners to provide solutions that reach all the way from the boardroom to the most remote wellheads," Tennefoss explained. "In the industrial enterprise, a lot of assets are distributed very far away, and typically cover very large areas." A standard wireless mesh network finds data packets hopping wirelessly from radio to radio, but latency often becomes an issue in demanding industrial and outdoor environments.

"Mesh network performance has not allowed those latency sensitive applications to work to their full potential," said Tennefoss. "Mesh has not been considered a primary form of communication but has been often relegated to a secondary role. That's the problem that Azalea set out to fix and through what they have, you can deliver broadcast-quality video and high-speed data over very long distances."

According to Aruba, Azalea has shipped more than 25,000 mesh nodes worldwide. Among the company's biggest deals was providing 600 mesh nodes for voice, video and Wi-Fi access over a 19-square-mile zone of Beijing during the 2008 Olympic Games.

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"We think there's tremendous potential in areas like video surveillance and smart grid for the technology they've created," Tennefoss said. "If you stand back and say, if I'm a channel partner, what does this acquisition mean for me, well, now we have standalone solutions for voice and video communication that use mesh technology, so if I'm competing against traditional solutions I have a great advantage over them by using Wi-Fi. You can add video surveillance and other things to product facilities without pulling wires."

Aruba expects the acquisition to close by the end of August, which would put it in the first quarter of Aruba's 2011 fiscal year. Azalea will be absorbed fully into Aruba, Tennefoss said, and it's still working out the details of Azalea executives' new roles.

Aruba gains regional offices in the deal, including Milpitas and an operations center in Beijing to go along with Aruba's existing R&D centers in Bangalore and Sunnyvale.

NEXT: Azalea Versus Wireless Mesh Competition Tennefoss said Aruba had had its eye on Azalea for a few years, and didn't consider competing wireless mesh vendors like BelAir or Firetide to have the same enterprise-class technology that Azalea created.

Azalea is also less expensive than competing solutions, he said.

Tennefoss said 12 Azalea MSR100 access points would cost about $24,000 per square mile, whereas a comparable Cisco solution using Cisco Aironet APs and Gateway routers could be more than six times that for an outdoor deployment.

"It's substantially less," he argued. "Cisco's architecture is an extension of their indoor network and really outdated."

Much like with Aruba's acquisition of AirWave two years ago, Tennefoss explained, Aruba saw a better business case for acquiring a company instead of building new tools in-house.

Aruba already has a line of internal wireless mesh offerings, he said, "but there's no pride of ownership saying we have to develop it ourselves in order to meet Aruba quality requirements."

Outdoor applications for WLAN and wireless mesh are going to be a crucial battleground for wireless vendors, said Matthias Machowinski, directing analyst for enterprise voice and data at Infonetics Research.

"The economic recovery, the need for ubiquitous connectivity, and emerging applications like smart grid and video surveillance are going to accelerate outdoor wireless infrastructure deployments by enterprises in the coming years," said Machowinski in a statement.

Having both indoor and outdoor wireless infrastructure options will prove fruitful for Aruba, he predicted.

According to Tennefoss, offering more flexibility and network strength for high-stress environments will be the dealmaker for VARs that play in the space.

"When you can deliver real-time video to a vehicle moving at 60 miles per hour, you can have public safety officials monitoring security video as they're driving through an industrial plant or college campus. It's that kind of scenario," he said.