By the most rigorous standards, Ethernet has been a success. Born thirty years ago, it is now a true standard: your laptop will come with both wired and wireless versions, either of which will work with the bare minimum of fuss with whatever Ethernet connectivity you encounter. In this business, that's as good as it gets.
So the Ethernet Alliance's formation earlier this week — purpose, to promote the use of the eponymous standard — would seem as pointless as the creation of the Beer Marketing Board. We already know and trust the product, and we thoroughly approve. You may now move on to telling us something we didn't already know.
The Alliance's given reasons for living are a bit more complicated than just plugging Ethernet. It wants to be an umbrella marketing organisation for all the 802 groups under the IEEE, and to organise interoperability tests. There are already plenty of such groups such as the Metro Ethernet Forum and the Wi-Fi Alliance, grouped more or less sensibly in areas where interoperability matters. And where there are problems such as in the standardisation efforts for Ultrawideband or 802.11n the issue is that there is too much strategic marketing input, not too little. The engineers are not left alone to do their job.
In 1976, Ethernet was a 3Mbps simple wired network. In 2006, Ethernet is a brand that covers hundreds of technologies, many entirely unrelated to each other. It must seem almost insulting to professional marketing managers that such a large, successful and disparate name should thrive without being managed professionally: we understand their frustration and itchy fingers. We do not approve.
It isn't broken. Don't fix it. If you want to fix things, ask yourselves why your companies aren't co-operating successfully where it matters, in the creation of true universal standards that will ensure the continued success of Ethernet. Just joining another marketing alliance is not the answer: taking a longer-term view than immediate market dominance is much closer to the mark.
Ethernet is more successful than you. Don't try and run it. Learn from it.







Talkback
Interesting article; although, a bit misleading. The Ethernet Alliance is not looking to be the umbrella organization for all IEEE 802 projects, but rather only for IEEE 802 "Ethernet" projects. These projects fall under IEEE 802.1 and 802.3.
While I do not expect everyone to understand or agree with the formation of the Ethernet Alliance, a very large percentage of industry professionals, analysts, experts, etc. do understand that the past successes of Ethernet standards have been supported by industry alliances. This is one of the few times in Ethernet's history that there was no alliance to support the technology, and I salute those in the standards bodies and the industry that have come together to support the alliance as Ethernet technology continues to grow and expand.