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To: John Rieman who wrote (42100)6/14/1999 11:42:00 AM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
Comcast to use Liberate software in set-tops
news.com

By Jim Davis
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
June 14, 1999, 5:30 a.m. PT

Liberate Technologies, the former Network Computer Incorporated, said today it
had finally bagged its most important customer win yet for its software: cable
operator Comcast.

Liberate Technologies said Comcast, the third largest cable operator in the United States,
signed an agreement to license software for interactive digital set-top boxes. The software
enables advanced set-top boxes to browse the Web, send email, and browse through a
growing array of television programming, among other features, and will be deployed
starting in the first half of 2000, Liberate said.

Details on the contract's worth, how many devices would use Liberate software, and the
cities they would be available in were not given.

Liberate's first deal with a cable operator, ironically, comes with the same company that
received a $1 billion investment from Microsoft. The use of Liberate technology does not
necessarily preclude the use of Microsoft's Windows CE operating system software,
though.

The licensing deal with Comcast follows Liberate's previously announced $50 million private
round of financing that included five leading cable companies: Comcast, Cox
Communications, MediaOne Ventures, Rogers Communications, and Shaw
Communications. With the successful closing of the Comcast deal, similar deals with the
other investors could follow soon, helping the company gain momentum as it readies an
IPO.

"We're pleased that Comcast has made a substantial commitment to Liberate, both
through equity ownership and through this licensing agreement," Mitchell Kertzman,
Liberate's CEO, said in a statement.

Recently, Liberate has been gaining momentum in the important U.S. market. Design wins
include the use of the company's software in set-top boxes that will bring America Online
to the television set. The company is also supplying software for use by US West to
provide interactive TV and telephony services and has secured a number of deals abroad.