
Invention: It’s a DNA Thing…
Written by Mark Harris
Published on November 19th, 2024
Invention matters. Everything you use, touch or see was invented by someone who saw an unfulfilled need. Someone with imagination along with an idea of how to do something better, or how to fill a gap long overlooked, or how to enable entirely new goals to be met. Over time, invention has become the DNA of business, and it is this desire to create something new that drives the way people think and the way business is conducted over time.
Step back for a minute to 1977, before Ethernet (yes, it was called “Ethernet” not 802.anything) existed. Sure, there were older networking technologies developed for highly specific needs prior to 1977, but they were mainly point-to-point or telco-inspired circuit/packet switched technologies (like leased-lines and X.25). Pre-1977 networking was a challenge not for the faint of heart, and when two systems actually ‘connected’, limited information could be moved across ‘the network’. When that happened, technologists smiled, and business moved a baby step forward. Why a baby step? Because it was still very hard, it was slow, it was costly, and it was limited by the economics, applications, availability and overall business workflow models which were designed decades ago to be manually executed. Remember hand-carried manila folders, inter-office mail pouches, US Mail and FAX machines? That is how information flowed in those early days.

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Then in 1977 Bob Metcalfe (from Xerox, who later founded 3COM) was granted a patent (#4,063,220) on his invention of shared network media which leveraged his research project conducted in Xerox’s PARC center a few years earlier. Once the patent was in hand and socialized, Xerox, Intel and Digital got together in 1980 and published in-depth materials describing how this new Ethernet media could be used for business to create local area networks, or “LANs”. With a LAN, hundreds of devices could communicate with one another at a fraction of the cost and complexity seen in the past. Once the concept of a LAN existed, invention flourished and the next 10 years saw the industry’s brightest minds inventing ways to bring the power of a LAN to office workers, with companies like Banyan, Novell and Microsoft racing to bring products for file and print sharing to market. (And remember it wasn’t until 1995 with the invention of the Internet that business networking traversed corporate borders.)
Fast forward to today and it’s easy to see that business changed forever once LANs became part of its standard foundation. Over the years, Bob’s original coax moved to twisted pair, which then moved to wireless, and longer distances were spanned through various media types (copper and optics), advanced switching and advanced within the 802.3 specifications that addressed timing, performance and even energy. And boy did the speed increased- dramatically. Remember the original Ethernet NIC specification was 10Mbps which is 10,000 times SLOWER than what you would expect in today’s advanced LAN configurations (which sport links of 100 Gbps or higher).
What does this history lesson reveal? The technologists’ desire to invent and the reliance by business for this innovation. Business thrives when pioneers see a problem and then spend the necessary resources to address that problem through invention. It is this commitment to innovation that drives the very core of business today.
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That is why Accton Technology has been inventing infrastructure technologies for 35 years, with more than 1200 patents issued (with almost 1000 of these globally). It’s the DNA in our blood. We see every aspect of what it takes to drive connected information management in business. Take one of our latest patent publications, US11991095B2, which describes the means to scale network fabric size. While publication US20230320041A1 describes a means for intelligent fan control within a chassis. Obviously with more than 1200 patents, we spend a lot of resources inventing the requisite technologies needed to bring the industry’s most robust infrastructure products to market.
Accton and our Edgecore subsidiary has been on the forefront of network and computing innovation for decades and has shipped more than 8 million infrastructure products, ranging from switching and computing to power distribution and cooling. And as one of the top contributors to the Open Compute Project (since its inception in 2011), Accton and Edgecore Network has put our smartest minds to work solving the industry’s hardest problems across networking, computing, packaging, cooling and energy efficiency.
Stop by our booth at the Supercomputing 2024 and you see the latest innovations available from Accton and Edgecore, including our new open switching solutions that enable high capacity and time-sensitive workloads (like those required by AI/ML), our latest generation of GPU-based servers, along with previews of leading-edge immersion and cold-plate cooling technologies essential for the GPU buildouts being planned today.
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