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Gold/Mining/Energy : InfoInterActive Inc (IIA-ASE) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Corp Fin who wrote (779)6/10/1999 7:04:00 PM
From: Don Johnstone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1622
 
Thanks, CF;

Here's an interesting link between GTE and AOL. Some time back on this thread I tried to establish a link between AOL and IIA. Nothing came of it. Now I will follow this GTE/AOL effort and see if I can fit in IIA somehow!

news.com

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



GTE, AOL align for open access fight
By John Borland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
June 10, 1999, 12:00 p.m. PT

GTE and America Online are expected to organize a high-profile
demonstration next week to prove that giving Internet service providers
access to cable networks is both possible and practical, sources said.

The effort is designed to undercut arguments from AT&T and other cable
companies that claim allowing ISPs to use their cable networks is technically
infeasible, according to people familiar with the plans.

"What they're saying is that to operate the cable modem service, you do not
need to have just a single Internet access provider," said Rep. Rick Boucher
(D-Virginia), who said he intends to participate in an event introducing the
demonstration next week.

Cable companies like AT&T and Time Warner require their high-speed Internet
customers to use an affiliated ISP, such as Excite@Home or Road Runner. AOL
and GTE have been among the leading proponents of an effort to open cable
networks to other ISPs, in much the same way that telephone networks are
available to any dial-up ISP.

The open access movement was given new life last week when a federal judge
ruled that officials in Portland, Oregon, had the legal right to force cable
companies to open their networks to outside ISPs.

In the wake of that decision, AT&T and Excite@Home
executives said that their critics had not taken into
account the technical hurdles involved in allowing
cable open access. The infrastructure and the
developing standards weren't designed with such
connections in mind, the executives said.

"We'd probably have to have some changes to the
[new cable modem] standard at a minimum,
software changes and possibly in the way the
chipsets are built," said Milo Medin, Excite@Home's
chief technical officer. "It would be a multiyear effort
to redefine the standard."

In response, GTE and AOL will hold a high-profile
event in Washington next week to specifically target
these claims. The firms reportedly plan to link AOL's
Internet service to a GTE-provided cable network to
demonstrate that open access is possible, sources
said.

GTE and AOL declined to comment on the plans.

The companies are inviting key political figures to the event, including Reps.
Boucher and Bob Goodlatte (R-Virginia), both sponsors of legislation that would
require open cable access on a national level.

The demonstration will also help support the contention of consumer groups, who
have long said that cable open access is not as difficult as some companies have
made it out to be.

"For a company who has the motivation to solve the technical problems, open
access is feasible," said the Media Access Project's Cheryl Leanza. "GTE obviously
has the motivation to make this work."

GTE, while largely known as a local phone company, also owns its own small
cable TV network that operates in parts of California, Florida, and Hawaii. It
serves about 102,000 cable customers.

The event may be more of a sweeping statement to the cable industry rather
than a business deal, however. It is not expected to be linked to a broader
high-speed Internet business alliance, such as AOL's agreements to offer its Net
service over SBC Communications and Bell Atlantic digital subscriber lines (DSL).

Cable open access has already been demonstrated on a limited scale by other
companies. MindSpring Enterprises offers high-speed service in Montgomery,
Alabama, and Columbus, Georgia, though a small cable company called Knology
Holdings.

News.com's Corey Grice contributed to this report.


Related news stories
• Cable open access fight far from over June 7, 1999
• Oregon ruling may fuel open access fight June 4, 1999
• Congress takes aim at cable Net access May 6, 1999




To: Corp Fin who wrote (779)6/11/1999 10:47:00 AM
From: Don Johnstone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1622
 
<<www.witchity.com>> is operational

witchity.com

I wonder, as I often do about British terms and town/city names, where 'Witchity' comes from, the derivation thereof, I mean. Not knowing for sure, I am left to come up with 'witch-like', a good witch, of course, which, I suppose is one way of looking at ICM!!

Statements on the web site which grabbed me!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Witchity's singular focus is to develop and deliver a comprehensive
range of readily-accessible solutions that allow anyone using the Internet to simultaneously and effectively manage their full array of voice and data communications activities.

''''''''''''

deploying Internet Call Manager systems throughout western Europe and beyond

''''''''''''

This is the first in a series of advanced network and telecommunications services and products Witchity will provide in the near future

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

All very interesting,... and predictive!!

Cheers,

Don