Oleg Khaykin
President and CEO
Sure. I mean, there's really no inventory to speak of. I mean, all of our deliveries for field instruments to our customers are just in time and it mainly coincides with whenever they are doing any kind of major expansion project or a technology upgrade or things like that. There's also, obviously, when I say we see our revenue at the maintenance level, you know, there is this constant churn, that big chunk of our quarterly revenue is just churns. And it's just basically low of large numbers, big install base, you know, the batteries die, equipment gets damaged and they periodically replace whatever needs to be replaced. And, you know, it's been a fairly consistent number for the past several quarters, which, you know, makes me feel a bit better because it just shows you that the first thing customers come back to is they start replacing what's been damaged. And as they start looking at the major new projects, and we've heard obviously from AT&T, but also we're seeing, you know, tier two players like -- there was Lumen recently, had a call, and there's others. There's a lot of interest for developing fiber internetworking between all those hyperscale data centers and these are the players that are actually running projects today, and they're placing orders. And you know, clearly, so from that perspective, I don't know to what extent they have equipment inventories for, you know, networking gear, but I imagine that is also winding down. And you know, clearly, as they start talking about resuming their expansion and technology upgrade, that is what we view as a positive news for us. On the 11 production, that is also pretty much [Technical Difficulty] for new equipment. And it usually comes in when they are developing next generation product. They start placing orders in the fiber area and the high speed compute area. You know, high speed computers driving PCI Express 6.0 and the, you know, upcoming 1.6 terabits. I mean the budgets are open and the CapEx is flowing and we are seeing, you know, purely as soon as the equipment is available, they want it. So, in that respect, we feel pretty good. But there's also, probably further away in the second half of the fiscal year or first half of the calendar '25, the 1.6 terabits is flowing into the module manufacturing. And we're seeing a lot of interest from the major AI players to drive upgrades in their contract manufacturing factories to be able to deploy 1.6 terabit modules and products. And for the first time, it's really the data centers that are driving the transition to the higher speeds rather than service providers. When we saw 400-gig, 800-gig, they were driven by equipment vendors to service providers. This time, it's very much the data centers that are driving the transition to the higher speed, you know, speeds of the products, and that's why we're feeling much more bullish on our fiber lab and production equipment. So, that's kind of, you know, more color on those two areas.