I've been thinking, maybe I can get a part time job as an installer for COVD.  
  I've considered it! <g>
  From Thesteet.com:
  10 Things You Need to Know: Broadband's                                  Benefits Cut Wide Swath for Net Outfits                                  By Spencer E. Ante                                  Staff Reporter                                  1/6/00 10:33 AM ET 
                                                   This story is part of a weeklong series that looks at the                                                  top 10 trends to help you invest in the coming year.                                                  Click on the tile at left to see other stories. 
                                                   SAN FRANCISCO -- The interstate highway system                                                  triggered the development of cities, suburbs and                                                  businesses along its lonely stretches of pavement. In                                  the same way, an explosion in high-speed online networks could mean a                                  long-dreamt-of bonanza for Net content, services and applications companies                                  this year. 
                                   Wall Street has shown that it's confident the networks are getting in place to                                  make this high-speed Net access, called broadband, a reality for more                                  consumers and businesses. Fiber-optic equipment maker JDS Uniphase                                  (JDSU:Nasdaq - news) rose 850% in 1999, while Covad (COVD:Nasdaq -                                  news), a provider of digital subscriber lines, ended the year up more than                                  366% from its January IPO. 
                                                       Financiers and analysts figure 2000 will bring                                                      more gains to the smartest network builders. And                                                      the new broadband networks they build will allow                                                      services and applications to flourish. For instance,                                  J.P. Morgan figures the U.S. broadband opportunity for infrastructure,                                  services and applications will grow more than 30% annually to $100 billion by                                  2002 from $30 billion in 1998. 
                                   "We believe that bandwidth consumption will become the prime mover of an                                  increasingly technology-driven economy," says Mark Langner, an analyst at                                  J.P. Morgan. 
                                                    Kong-Size Opportunity                                            Broadband and IP data services market projections 
                                        Note: Percentage change is from previous year. Source: J.P. Morgan Securities
                                   The winners could include established companies like Yahoo!                                  (YHOO:Nasdaq - news), RealNetworks (RNWK:Nasdaq - news) and Exodus                                  (EXDS:Nasdaq - news). 
                                   Yahoo!, for instance, is leveraging its purchase of Broadcast.com and                                  reportedly developing a daily, two-hour live video program for the Net. And                                  whenever Web surfers demand richer audio and video, streaming media leader                                  RealNetworks stands to benefit. 
                                   Small Fry
                                   And there are scores of small fry jostling to beat the bandwidth rush. The top                                  names that analysts cite are Launch Media (LAUN:Nasdaq - news), which                                  creates music content, Quokka Sports (QKKA:Nasdaq - news), which                                  provides sports programming, and EMusic (EMUS:Nasdaq - news), which                                  offers downloadable music. 
                                   Hand in hand with content is advertising. CMGI (CMGI:Nasdaq - news), which                                  has assembled a band of online marketing and advertising companies, is well                                  positioned here, analysts say. 
                                   "Advertising has been somewhat thwarted by narrowband," says Dan O'Brien,                                  an analyst at Forrester Research. "Rich advertising would greatly increase                                  the effectiveness of advertising." 
                                   More bandwidth also will help companies service consumers and businesses                                  over the Net. "You've got this opportunity to deliver a whole range of services                                  over this pipe," explains Peter Wagner, general partner with VC firm Accel                                  Partners. "I think that this story will take root in 2000." 
                                   One good example is the application service providers, or ASPs, which allow                                  people to use software without the large upfront costs. For instance, people                                  could dial in to rent constantly upgraded Microsoft Word rather than keeping                                  an aging copy on their PC. 
                                               Small Biz Goes Big on Broadband                                               Business broadband penetration projections                                                                                                                           Source: J.P. Morgan Securities
                                   Despite high start-up costs, software companies like Siebel (SEBL:Nasdaq -                                  news) and Oracle (ORCL:Nasdaq - news) have high hopes for the ASP                                  model. Sun Microsystems (SUNW:Nasdaq - news), a star stock in 1999, is                                  distributing its Star Office software over the Web. And USinternetworking                                  (USIX:Nasdaq - news) is focusing on the support and distribution of enterprise                                  software applications. 
                                   Bottleneck Breakers
                                   Meanwhile, companies tackling the Internet's bottlenecks by routing, caching                                  or storing data may be less obvious bandwidth beneficiaries. Pioneers                                  Inktomi (INKT:Nasdaq - news) and Akamai (AKAM:Nasdaq - news) have the                                  advantage of an early lead. But there are promising newcomers. 
                                   iBeam, a private firm, has set up a satellite-based network for distributing                                  audio and video, and Xcelera.com's (XLA:Amex - news) Mirror Image, a                                  content distribution and caching service, look good, says Peter Christy, a                                  principal analyst with the Internet Research Group. (Christy has done                                  consulting for both companies.) 
                                   Another promising entrant is InterNAP (INAP:Nasdaq - news), whose network                                  of private Net tollbooths can send data along the shortest path across the                                  Internet. "I think InterNAP will be great for things like chat or email," says                                  James Callinan, portfolio manager of the RS Emerging Growth fund, which is                                  long InterNAP. 
                                   And someone is going to have to manage that content. Web hosting                                  companies like Exodus and Digital Island (ISLD:Nasdaq - news), both of                                  which store and maintain Web content and applications, will be busier as                                  more bits move around the new networks. 
                                   Just as the interstates took decades to build, there will be plenty more                                  broadband building down the road. "It's a bit of a misperception that we're                                  going to arrive at broadband at a certain point," says Munder Capital                                  portfolio manager Paul Cook. "The buildout is just starting."  |