• On TV.com: THE GIRLS NEXT DOOR photos

April 19, 2004 9:01 AM PDT

3Com goes to India

  • Print
3Com on Monday said it plans to open an engineering design center next month in Hyderabad, India.

The center will focus on voice over Internet Protocol, or VoIP, networking technology currently being developed at the company's facilities in Rolling Meadows, Ill., and in Marlborough and Andover, Mass., the company said.

Last year, 3Com said it would focus its internal engineering strength on products such as VoIP and application-specific integrated circuit chips, and farm out other work to offshore locations. It also set up a new product design house in Taiwan to manage the design and manufacturing of its low-price, high-volume products.


Get Up to Speed on...
VoIP
Get the latest headlines and
company-specific news in our
expanded GUTS section.


3Com said the Indian center will work on VoIP software features and application development, while the teams in the United States are focused on VoIP architecture and product development. Officials said the center should eventually employ 50 to 100 workers, and a similar number of workers will be added in the United States.

"The leading-edge R&D (will be) developed in North America," said Liam Kiely, vice president of engineering at 3Com. "Anything devoted to testing maintenance and so on we're bringing on in India."

A number of U.S. corporations have announced plans either to set up new engineering centers or to expand their existing centers in Indian technology hubs like Bangalore and Hyderabad. The idea is to take advantage of locally available engineering talent and India's proximity to markets in Asia Pacific and Europe. In January, storage gear maker Adaptec unveiled plans to pump $25 million into two centers--in Hyderabad and Bangalore, respectively--over the next four years. Workers at the centers will develop new chips, IP storage tools and external storage products.

VoIP enables telephone calls over the Internet, and telephone companies fear that adoption of the technology could eat into their revenues. The Federal Communications Commission is working out its own stance on the issue, while many states believe that they have a regulatory role, when it comes to Internet phone providers.

See more CNET content tagged:
3Com Corp., Hyderabad, VoIP, India, center

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 1 comment
Yet another un-American company
by April 21, 2004 10:56 AM PDT
It seems its getting harder and harder these day to buy from American companies. I try really hard to only purchase form companies that do not send the work overseas or at least the lesser of the evils if I have no choice. Companies like 3Com want Americans to support them and purchase their products but yet they send the work overseas. It?s called biting the hand that feeds them. America gave them the opportunities to make there company what it is today but yet they return the favor by taking jobs away from Americans. This to me is totally and completely anti-American. If Americans don?t work they can?t buy, it?s that simple but most can?t comprehend the obvious. Our country and our children will most definitely pay dearly for this type of disregard and anti-Americanism in the future.
If 3Com displays an American flag at there corporate office they should take it down in disgrace.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

Resource center from CNET News sponsors
Aligning CIO & CEO visions
What CIOs need to know

Click Here!
It's a simple truth. The closer you and your CEO see things, the greater your chance for success. Our exclusive report can help you get there—and help your business grow. Get the report featuring the views of 765 CEOs on innovation. learn more

Click Here!
What CEOs think: Innovation Insights for CIOs

Learn How CIOs can deliver strategic success for their enterprises

The New CIO: Beyond Technology

Learn how CIOs become heroes

Podcast: Chris Gorog of Napster

Learn about the impact of technology in strategy execution

The future of the Enterprise

Read more about tomorrow's organization

CIO Vision Series:Innovating within a retail industry disrupted by the Web

Video: CIO of Virgin Entertainment Group, Robert Fort

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

3Com (2.00%) 0.03 1.53
Adaptec (16.80%) 0.42 2.92
Dow Jones Industrials (6.54%) 494.13 8,046.42
S&P 500 (6.32%) 47.59 800.03
NASDAQ (5.18%) 68.23 1,384.35
CNET TECH (5.95%) 56.25 1,002.00
  Symbol Lookup
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right