Here we GO!!!Westell/Texas Instrument Alliance Enhanced by Formation of Universal PC/Telco ADSL Consortium
Westell joins Compaq, Intel, Microsoft led pact to deliver unified, interoperable standards compliant Consumer-ADSL systems to major Telco Service
Providers
AURORA, Ill., Jan. 27 /PRNewswire/ -- Westell Technologies (Nasdaq: WSTL) announced today its participation in a consortium led by Compaq, Intel, Microsoft and major service providers Ameritech, Bell Atlantic, Bell Canada, BellSouth, GTE, MCI, SBC Communications, Sprint and US West. Over the past six months Westell has provided leadership and actively participated in the Universal Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) Working Group. The group's objective is to accelerate the adoption and availability of high-speed digital Internet access for the mass residential and business markets. Westell is working with the group to support the requirements of the consumer, focusing on lowering cost and simplifying the installation. The net result from the working group is expected to be the establishment of a universal ADSL standard, resulting in a universal ADSL modem, projected to be the dominant PC modem technology by the year 2000. The Working Group is composed of leading PC industry, networking and telecommunications companies.
"Now, with the personal computer and telecommunications industries formally working together toward standards-based interoperability, the work we have been doing with Texas Instruments, geared towards provide the industry's first commercially deployable splitterless ADSL system, should accelerate the availability of these benefits to both telcos and consumers," stated Brian Henrichs, Westell's Vice President of Broadband Systems. Texas Instruments is also a very active participant and leader within the Universal ADSL Working Group. One of the first products that will result from Westell's strategic alliance with Texas Instruments, originally announced in November 1997, is a splitterless G.lite DMT-based standards compliant ADSL system. Texas Instruments will discuss details of this product at their Datacom Summit in Sante Fe, New Mexico on January 27, 1998. Westell is also working with TI to develop next generation DSL solutions, including platforms with higher speeds and more consumer oriented digital modems, all leveraging TI's digital signal processing (DSP)-based programmable chips.
"We believe that our alliance with Westell and the emergence and anticipated cooperative effort of the Universal ADSL Working Group will greatly accelerate market deployment of our ADSL products," said George Barber, Vice President of TI's Semiconductor Group.
The leverage gained from a universal ADSL standard is expected to provide Westell and TI with an early jump on the commercial deployment of a G.lite standards compliant solution and should accelerate the ultimate mass deployment of broadband multimedia services such as high speed Internet access, work at home and real-time video communications. A universal ADSL standard should also help drive installation cost down while giving consumers "always on" Internet access, at more than 25 times more speed than they can now get from their 56k modems.
The Universal ADSL Working Group will further develop the existing T1.413 (or DMT) standard to create quicker deployment and adoption of Universal ADSL. The Group will deliver a series of technical papers to the International Telecommunications Union G.lite subcommittee in early 1998, and it will issue a developer's guide that will set a clear design target for technology vendors worldwide.
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