| ADSP/MEGW news story....maybe this is why we are running? 
 INTELLIGENT NETWORK NEWS
 
 November 24, 1999
 
 SECTION: Vol. 9, No. 24
 
 LENGTH: 613 words
 
 HEADLINE: MORE POWER TO POINTS OF PRESENCE
 
 BODY:
 As in any system, everyone wants to know who holds the power.
 Within the dynamic telecom infrastructure, telecom vendors are
 elbowing one another to make their products indespensible for powering
 telecom networks.
 
 Cranbury, N.J.-based Ariel Corp. [ADSP] hopes it can give
 carriers, from  voice and data worlds, a way to trim hardware costs
 and get new services to subscribers.
 Ariel's service, Power POP, adds horsepower to points of
 presence, moving service delivery closer to where users dial in.
 By shifting network power to the POPs, a carrier can run
 services on PowerPOP servers and avoid routing service requests
 through a network operation center.
 "ISPs', biggest problem tends to be supplying local dial-up
 access," says George Dinsdale, president of MegaWorld [MEGW], a
 Houston-based next-generation service provider that is testing Ariel's
 PowerPOP service for the next six months.
 
 "This works exactly the same as the class 4 and 5 switch, but is
 less expensive.  It integrates the technology, SS7, into a remote
 access device."
 
 More Alluring Than T1 Trunks
 
 One of the benefits in working with MegaWorld is the carrier
 provides power to the POP and lets ISPs take advantage of trunk
 tariffs that are substantially more attractive than the T1 trunks they
 are able to get under normal circumstances, says Dennis Schneider,
 Ariel VP of marketing.
 
 The average T1 uses in-band signaling, which relays what is
 happening within voice channels.
 "ISPs will be able to reduce operational costs drastically,"
 says Nathan Guedalia, Ariel senior product manager.  "Along with that
 byproduct is enhanced performance."
 Not only will MegaWorld slash operational costs, it plans to
 turn competitors into customers when they seek local access.
 "We're offering this as a full service that will allow ISPs to
 reduce their total access costs," Dinsdale says.  "This is the new
 service, the melding, convergence of voice and data - we'll offer it
 as a full solution on an outsourcing basis."
 
 Where Are Those Savings?
 
 The benefit for ISPs and fledgling competitive carriers is
 getting access down to a lower price per month.  For ISPs, whose
 inbound trunks may comprise 15 percent to 20 percent of their total
 monthly expenses - trimming those costs by a factor of 10 means
 substantial savings.
 Without PowerPOP, ISPs usually install fixed-function equipment
 into each POP.  Using this structure, when a subscriber makes a
 request for service, the POP forwards the request to a network
 operation center.  The center then fulfills the request and sends it
 back to the POP.
 
 Ariel's PowerPOP allows ISPs to install intelligent PC-based
 systems running on Windows NT Server or Linux as a general-purpose
 platform for providing network services.
 
 Running services on PowerPOP servers in PowerPOP architected
 networks satisfies a subscriber request.  These systems handle V.90-
 compatible dial-up calls from modems, as well as ISDN clients via T1
 and/or PRI interfaces.  PowerPOP also provides distributed or mirrored
 implementations of key network services, such as RADIUS
 authentication, domain name services, Web caching and filtering.
 In addition to targeting CLECs, Ariel hopes to attract ISPs,
 which are morphing into competitive carriers.
 "ISPs becoming CLECs is the obvious way for ISPs to evolve their
 businesses," Schneider says.
 
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