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Technology Stocks : Newbridge Networks
NN 15.49+6.7%Dec 4 3:59 PM EST

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To: pat mudge who wrote (8528)12/14/1998 6:59:00 PM
From: gbh  Read Replies (2) of 18016
 
Pat, you're slumm'in. You missed this one too. Am I going to have to find all Newbridge's CLEC customers for you? <ggg>

news.com

IXC flexes its new Net backbone
By Corey Grice
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
December 14, 1998, 3:05 p.m. PT

IXC Communications today unveiled its new nationwide Internet backbone network designed for commercial and
research data traffic.

The network, dubbed Gemini2000, will use technology from Cisco Systems, Newbridge Networks, and Nortel Networks.

Divided into eight core sites, IXC's network is now live in New York, Washington, and San Francisco. Executives said three more
core sites are scheduled be brought online during the first quarter of 1999, with the remaining sites to go live by the third quarter
next year.

Gemini2000 will have core site facilities, or central traffic switching points, in Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, and Newark, Delaware
and Austin, Texas.

As previously reported, New York-based non-profit network provider NYSERNet will be involved in the network, utilizing it as a
regional deployment partner for Internet2, a consortium of 135 universities working together for new IP-based network
technologies for their collaborative research projects.

NYSERNet, which established the first Internet2 point-of-presence linking 23 universities in New York state, will begin using
IXC's Gemini2000 backbone in early 1999, executives said.

The National Science Foundation is now testing IXC's Gemini2000 network for compliance with
Internet2 standards.

Meanwhile, NYSERNet affiliate Applied Theory Communications, an Internet service provider, will
be IXC's first commercial customer. The ISP intends to offer high-speed tools and services for
government, universities, and businesses. Applied Theory invested in IXC earlier this year.

IXC's high-speed network, capable of OC-48 speeds, or 2.4 Gigabits per second, could enable data
to travel up to 1,000 times faster than today's Internet, the company said.

The name Gemini, meaning "twins," is in reference to the dual purpose of the network for both
commercial and research and education uses, the company said.
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