SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Microcap & Penny Stocks : Globalstar Telecommunications Limited GSAT -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: djane who wrote (5564)7/7/1999 8:57:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
07:33 [ICOGF] ICO GLOBAL TO OFFER RURAL SATELLITE TELEPHONY SERVICES IN MEXICO.

These guys sure issue a lot of press releases for a company having problems raising financing -- maybe that's your answer :-)



To: djane who wrote (5564)7/7/1999 9:20:00 AM
From: djane  Respond to of 29987
 
China Wants To Set Own Standards for Global Mobile Communications, Vice-Minister

(7/6/99) An official in the Ministry of Information Industry, the country's
IT and telecom regulatory agency, said China will be involved in
determining standards for the nation's information industry over the next
two to three years, the June 29 Zhongguo Jingji Shibao (China
Economic Times) reported.

Vice-Minister Lu Xinkui explained that it is important for China to set its
own standards in the industry because this will benefit the nation's
economic development. Lu made his comments at the Working
Conference of the Standardization of the Information Industry.

"Because China did not help formulate standards in the first and
second stages in the development of mobile communications, we paid
dearly [in having to buy foreign technology]," Lu said.

"The standards we followed during these past decades of planned
economy were not amenable to the development of our information
industry," he added.

Lu went on to say that the MII's methodology of setting standards "is
not suitable for the market economy or the development of information
industry." For example, the ministry is slow in reacting to market
conditions, he said.

R&D is separate from market research and the ministry is slow to
react, "Therefore, we should gear the formulation of standards in
reaction to market needs, and we should do this as soon as possible,"
Lu said.

He sees this as a three-step process:

1.Enterprises should be an integral part of the decision-making in
determining standards.
2.Standards should be set according to the needs of the market,
and should service China's own information industry. "Industry
standards are an extension of a nation's sovereignty," Lu stated.
"It is an important way for a country to control trade and protect
home-grown, nascent industries."
3.Standards should be set to promote technological innovation.
This can be greatly aided with the granting of patents.

Lu further iterated that the MII will launch a pilot project to reform the
standards-determination process. The goal will be to develop a rational
framework and distinct system of standardization that will promote
development of the information industry.



Home | Economic News | Industry News | About ChinaOnline
Membership Registration | Products & Services | Calendar of Events
Contact Us | Statistics | Reference Materials

© ChinaOnline 1999.




To: djane who wrote (5564)7/7/1999 9:27:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 29987
 
*Vodafone AirTouch Connections Soar Around the World

Wednesday July 7, 8:47 am Eastern Time

Company Press Release

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 7, 1999--Vodafone AirTouch Plc, the world's largest mobile telecommunications
company, today released connection figures for the period from April to June 1999 which showed strong growth in customer
connections in all regions of the world.

During the calendar quarter over 2.303 million net new proportionate mobile phone customers joined Vodafone AirTouch
networks. The Vodafone AirTouch proportionate customer base at the end of June 1999 stood at almost 28 million users,
excluding paging customers. The company, formed last week following a merger between Vodafone Group Plc and AirTouch
Communications, Inc., has interests in mobile telephone networks in 23 countries on four continents. It operates through three
divisions: the UK; Europe, Middle East and Africa; and USA/Asia Pacific.

In the UK, the total number of customers connected at the end of June was over 6,162,000. Vodafone added more than
587,000 net new customers in the quarter, an increase of over 2.5 times the 206,000 achieved in the equivalent quarter of
1998 and over ten times the comparable period of 1997. The Pay As You Talk (PAYT) service grew by more than 654,000
in the quarter taking the total PAYT base from over 1,846,000 to more than 2,501,000. The contract customer base declined
in the period by 67,000 due to a series of large scale disconnections by two service providers.

In the Europe, Middle East and Africa division, which consists of operations in fifteen countries, the total customer base at the
end of June 1999 was over 10.34 million. During the quarter over 1,179,000 new customers were connected. These figures
exclude the Vodafone AirTouch interest in the E-Plus network in Germany which is due to be sold following the merger.

In the USA/Asia Pacific region, which has operations in seven countries, the customer base grew by more than 537,000 during
the quarter, resulting in a total mobile phone customer base of almost 11.1 million. The Vodafone AirTouch customer base in
the USA at the end of June stood at over 8.95 million, having added over 285,000 customers during the quarter. This increase
was despite intense competition in all its major markets many of which have four or more competitors. Digital connections
continued to be strong.

Commenting, Chris Gent, Chief Executive of Vodafone AirTouch said: ''The unprecedented growth in mobile telephony that
we have seen around the world this year has continued throughout the last quarter in all our major markets. Especially
encouraging is an increasing trend of usage amongst pre-paid users, particularly in the UK. The global scale of Vodafone
AirTouch gives us access to a wide range of diverse markets around the world, and has now given us almost as many
customers outside the original two 'home' markets of the USA and the UK as we have within them. This gives us huge scale
and development potential with risk diversity. The growth of the wireless market is truly a world-wide phenomena.''

Notes to Editors:

(1) The Europe, Middle East, Africa region covers the Vodafone AirTouch interests in the following countries: Belgium,
Egypt, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Malta, The Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, South Africa, Spain,
Sweden, and Uganda
(2) The US/Asia Pacific region covers the Vodafone AirTouch interests in the following countries: Australia, Fiji, India,
Japan, New Zealand, South Korea and the USA.

Contact:

Vodafone AirTouch
Terry Barwick, Director of Corporate Affairs,
Tim Brown, Investor Relations Director,
+44 1635 33251

Tavistock Communications
Lulu Bridges / Peter Willetts,
Telephone +44 171 600 2288

More Quotes and News:
Vodafone Airtouch PLC (NYSE:VOD - news)
Related News Categories: telecom

Help

Copyright © 1999 Business Wire. All rights reserved.



To: djane who wrote (5564)7/8/1999 11:31:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29987
 
Russia needs Kazakstan to waiver space launch ban

FLORIDA TODAY Space Online
"Planet Earth's best source for online space news"

July 8, 1999


Copyright © 1999, The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast or re-distributed directly or re-directly.

MOSCOW (AP) - Russia needs Kazakstan to waive its ban on space launches from
the Baikonur cosmodrome so it can send food, fuel and equipment supplies to the
Mir space station, Russian space officials said.

But the head of the Kazak Aerospace Agency, Meirbek Moldabekov, said "not a
single launch" will be made until authorities have determined what caused Monday's
crash of a Russian military satellite, the Interfax news agency reported.

Authorities are also looking into the environmental damages caused by all the
launches.

The suspension of launches is a major inconvenience for Russia, which leases the
field for cargo flights to the Mir space station and for its launches of commercial and
military satellites.

The Russian Space Agency asked Kazakstan to relax the ban and allow it to launch
a Russian-Ukrainian Okean-O satellite today but was turned down.

Russia also needs to send a Progress cargo ship carrying food, fuel and equipment to
the Mir's crew on Wednesday, Interfax quoted space officials as saying.

The delay of Progress' launch could wreak havoc on the Mir. The Mir's crew -
cosmonauts Viktor Afanasyev and Sergei Avdeyev - would have to cancel a space
walk planned for July 23 if they don't receive scientific equipment on the cargo ship,
Interfax quoted officials as saying.

The Progress flight was also supposed to carry equipment needed to prepare the
station for when the crew returns to Earth in August. Russia can no longer afford to
keep up its missions to the station, and so plans to leave the Mir unstaffed and
monitor it from the ground until it is discarded early next year.

Russia says both launches planned this month from Baikonur will be boosted by
rockets that use less fuel and are safer than the Proton-type that failed in Monday's
launch. The Okean-O will travel with a Zenit-2 booster rocket, and the Progress
with a Soyuz booster, it said.

A Russian Raduga-1 satellite and parts of its Proton booster crashed Monday in
Kazakstan's central Karaganda region. No casualties were reported.

Russia's Foreign Ministry apologized Tuesday for the accident and said Russian
experts had left for the region to investigate, Interfax reported.

Kazakstan has long been worried about the potential harm caused during launches
from Baikonur, which was built under the Soviet Union. Environmentalists in the
region complain about the rocket fuel that gets dumped during each space launch.
______________________________________

FLORIDA TODAY Space Online
"Planet Earth's best source for online space news"

July 8, 1999

Ban on Baikonur launches delays today's Zenit 2 flight

FLORIDA TODAY

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Today's scheduled launch of a Ukrainian Zenit 2
booster was postponed because of a ban on launches from Baikonur Cosmodrome,
a news report said.

Kazakstan officials ordered the halt in launches after a Russian Proton rocket
malfunctioned and crashed during a failed launch on Monday.

The Zenit 2 rocket is poised to carry a Ukrainian-Russian Earth sciences satellite into
space.

The Reuters news agency said Russian sources indicated the launch would probably
take place Friday or Monday.

"The delay of the launch was not connected with any technical problems, but with
Kazakhstan's ban on flights from the cosmodrome," a Russian space source said.

"We expect a decision this evening on whether it will take place tomorrow or
Monday."

Russia hopes the ban is lifted soon, because only six days remain before the planned
July 14 launch of a new navigation system needed for the space station Mir, Reuters
said. The computer system is due to be launched on a Soyuz rocket carrying a
Progress resupply ship.

Baikonur has been part of Kazakstan since the breakup of the former Soviet Union,
and the two countries signed a 1994 agreement allowing Russia to rent the facility for
20 years.

Use of this site signifies your agreement to the Terms of Service updated February 1998.
Please e-mail comments or questions about this page to Space Online Editor Mark DeCotis.
Contact Space Online Manager Jim Banke to inquire about becoming a sponsor.
This World Wide Web site is copyright © 1999 FLORIDA TODAY.