Buzzinbees

Buzzinbees is a privately owned company that develops software and sells it to telecommunication equipment and software vendors. It is based in Seyssinet-Pariset near Grenoble in France. It was founded in 2009 by its current CEO Jean-René Bouvier.[1] Buzzinbees's products are currently active in more than 135 countries worldwide.[2] In December 2015, Gemalto acquired Buzzinbees for an undisclosed amount. Olivier Piou stated that the acquisition was motivated by Buzzinbees activation solution, especially for machine to machine.[3]

Buzzinbees SAS
IndustryTelecommunication software
FateAcquired by Gemalto in December 2015
Founded2009
FounderJean-René Bouvier
HeadquartersSeyssinet-Pariset, and Sophia-Antipolis, France
ProductsBee-SOON
Number of employees
40 (2015)
Websitewww.buzzinbees.com

History

Buzzinbees was created by Hewlett-Packard senior executives in October 2009. A strategic licensing agreement[4] with the IT giant allows Buzzinbees to continue to develop and enhance products that have been deployed for more than 20 years by HP (it is acknowledged that HP started to provide telecommunication operators and equipment providers with carrier grade signaling as soon as 1988[5]).

HP has become one of Buzzinbees's customers, buying signaling platforms as well as other products to embed them into its telecommunication solutions.[6]

In February 2010, Buzzinbees announced its collaboration with PT on a messaging server: Bee-IRON. The Bee-IRON platform is a flagship product from Buzzinbees which can deliver and route 2,500 SMS per second in a single node. It complements PT's MicroTCA server.[7]

In May 2010, Buzzinbees focused its attention on automatic SIM activation, targeting fast growing markets such as African, Asian and Latin American operators. This effort became visible at the 2012 next generation telecom summit in Nairobi.[8][9]

Buzzinbees's name was inspired by the highly social communicating bees.[10] Indeed, bees do communicate in order to recruit other worker bees to forage in the same area they found flowers. The Buzzinbees logo — pictured left — "sports a hexagonal cell" reminiscent of "honeycombs but also cellular networks" as well as 3 pairs of bee "antennas".

In November 2015, Buzzinbees's CEO created another company, Facts Haven SAS with a new logo. Following the Gemalto acquisition, his LinkedIn profile indicates[11] that he no longer works for Buzzinbees. However, the Buzzinbees company still exists as a legal entity.

Products

Buzzinbees's portfolio encompasses network nodes built atop a comprehensive suite of signaling products providing complete development platforms based on global telecommunication standards and protocols.[6]

These products work indeed with SS7 (signaling system #7), IMS (IP multimedia subsystem) and LTE (long term evolution) protocols. They augment networks with intelligent functions (intelligent network).[12]

Buzzinbees's distribution channel is very specific: it sells to independent software vendors and equipment providers, as opposed to selling directly to operators.

Since 2011, Buzzinbees openly focused on automatic SIM activation and the nascent machine to machine market, pushing their Bee-SOON (SIM on-off node) product.[13] Following the Gemalto acquisition, it introduced the concept of SIM reactivation[14] whereby operators can let users reuse expired SIM cards instead of purchasing new ones when they wish to re-subscribe to that operator.

gollark: <@332271551481118732> Do you think I can find minoteaur contributors? All I need is people who know Nim/web stack, can somehow fit with my programming style, and who share approximately the same extremely vague vision.
gollark: Interestingly, according to heavpoot, the 34th version of minoteaur is to be rewritten in heavlisp 7.0 after it subsumes JavaScript.
gollark: All insanity can be bidirectionally mapped to an instance of heavlisp.
gollark: Heavlisp is isomorphic to insanity.
gollark: With the lessons learned from osmarkslisp™ it might even have working scope. Although this one also might. I haven't checked.

References

  1. "Sophia-Antipolis Buzzinbees makes the world buzz around". Archived from the original on 2011-02-07. Retrieved 2010-12-19.
  2. "About Buzzinbees". Archived from the original on 2010-07-26. Retrieved 2010-12-19.
  3. "Gemalto's earning conference". Archived from the original on 2016-11-04. Retrieved 2016-04-21.
  4. "Buzzinbees teams up with Hewlett-Packard". Archived from the original on 2010-08-13. Retrieved 2010-12-19.
  5. "Buzzinbees and PT cooperate". Retrieved 2010-12-19.
  6. "SIP trunking - Buzzinbees teams with HP".
  7. "Buzzinbees rolls Bee-IRON messaging with PT". Manufacturing Close - Up. 2010. Retrieved 2010-12-19.
  8. "20 CEOs Choose Buzzinbees in Africa at GDS International's NG Telecoms Summit". 2012. Retrieved 2012-12-04.
  9. "automatic device detection". 2013. Archived from the original on 2012-12-08. Retrieved 2013-03-03.
  10. "Our name". 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-03-04. Retrieved 2013-03-03.
  11. "JR Bouvier's profile". 2016. Retrieved 2016-02-11.
  12. "Introduction to signaling". Archived from the original on 2010-08-13. Retrieved 2010-12-19.
  13. "Mobile communications international" (PDF). Retrieved 2014-04-02.
  14. "Gemalto pioneers SIM reactivation". Retrieved 2016-11-03.
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