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Strategies & Market Trends : Working All Day, But Trading Behind the Bosses Back Thread

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To: Mark[ox5] who wrote ()4/5/1999 12:09:00 PM
From: Mark[ox5]   of 779
 
Interesting article about YHOO/AOL and their vision for the future... I like it...

Yahoo to extend service beyond PCs

NEW YORK, April 5 (Reuters) - Leading Internet portal Yahoo! Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO -
news) is planning to extend its reach beyond personal computers to hand-held devices and
television-based Internet appliances like WebTV.

Santa Clara, Calif.-based Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news) and Online Anywhere said
on Monday that the companies reached a deal to extend Yahoo's brand through Online
Anyhere's Author Once, View Anywhere service.

''Author Once, View Anywhere functionality will help Yahoo! users access their
personalized Yahoo! content and services wherever they go,'' said Mohan Vishwanath, Online Anywhere chief executive
officer. ''The ability to access all types of information without being tethered to a PC is the next logical step for Internet users.''

''As part of our Yahoo! Everywhere' strategy, we remain committed to forging agreements with companies, such as Online
Anywhere, that offer Yahoo! content display integrity and maximum extensibility in the PC environment and beyond,'' said Ellen
Siminoff, Yahoo's vice president of business development and strategic planning.

Palo Alto, Calif.-based Online Anywhere is a start-up firm funded by Motorola Inc. (NYSE:MOT - news) unit Motorola
Ventures that enables Internet providers to rapidly reformat and deliver their content to televisions, personal digital assistants,
and wireless devices.

The company's patented FlashMap technology automatically converts Internet sites that have been formatted for a personal
computer to a format appropriate for the device.

Yahoo agreed last week to buy Broadcast.com Inc. (Nasdaq:BCST - news), a top Web video provider, for $5.7 billion.

Rival Internet service provider America Online Inc. (NYSE:AOL - news) is busy developing its own ''AOL Anywhere''
service, bolstered through its merger with Netscape Communications and its alliance with Sun Microsystems
Inc.(Nasdaq:SUNW - news), to link the Internet to appliances besides personal computers.

AOL's strategy is also to make its service available through high speed cable television, telephone and wireless connections.

Both companies are competing with media and Internet ambitions of Microsoft Corp.(Nasdaq:MSFT - news), the world's
largest software maker and the owner of WebTV.
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