Newbridge Networks
Newbridge Networks was an Ottawa, Ontario, Canada company founded by Welsh-Canadian entrepreneur Sir Terry Matthews. It was founded in 1986 to create data and voice networking products after Matthews was forced out of his original company Mitel. According to Matthews, he saw that data networking would grow far faster than voice networking, and he had wanted to take Mitel in much the same direction, but the 'risk-averse' British Telecom dominated Mitel board refused and effectively ousted him. The name Newbridge Networks comes from Sir Terry Matthews' home town of Newbridge in south Wales.
Newbridge quickly became a major market player in this area using the voice switching and software engineering expertise that was prevalent in the Ottawa area.
The company initially had innovative channelbank products, which allowed telcos with existing wiring to offer a wide variety of new services. Newbridge also offered (for the time) the industry's most innovative network management (46020 NMS) and ISDN TAP 3500, RS-232C 3600 Mainstreet PC 4601A and Mac ACC "River" Routers networking products, including distributed star-topology routing through both proprietary software over the unused facilities' data links in optical hardware and telco switches.
In 1992-93 the company became increasingly focused upon and well known for its family of ATM products.
Newbridge later absorbed some routing technology that had been abandoned by Tandem Computers, with the purchase of Ungerman Bass Networks and entered the pure data networking market with a traditional routing and switching product. This was in addition to its internally developed ViViD product line, which was a network-wide distributed routing product (ridge or routing bridge -- bridges with a centralized routing server).
Newbridge was purchased and absorbed by Alcatel in late February 2000 [1] for over $7 billion in stock. With this transaction, Matthews became the single largest shareholder in Alcatel.