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To: OLDTRADER who wrote (135768)7/7/1999 11:22:00 PM
From: PAL  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176387
 
William:

It seems that only you, edamo and I are the only ones who feel that Dell will benefit from buying CPQ: facilties, workers, world wide service, market share, cost savings, technology, economies of scale, etc.

Best regards

Paul




To: OLDTRADER who wrote (135768)7/8/1999 7:46:00 AM
From: Dorine Essey  Respond to of 176387
 


By Neal Boudette, European Telecommunications Correspondent
FRANKFURT, July 8 (Reuters) - Dell Computer Corp DELL.O
said on Thursday that it had launched its "free" Internet access
service in France, following similar starts in Britain and
Germany.
"We just went live last night," Gordon Ballantyne, director
of Dell Online in Europe, told Reuters in an interview.
The service, called DellNet, offers Internet access with no
monthly fee or subscription charges. Users only pay the cost of
local phone calls while dialed in to the service.
Dell, the world's leading direct marketer of personal
computers, plans to expand the service throughout Western Europe
in the second half of the year.
"We are looking at a very aggressive roll-out," Ballantyne
said. He declined to say where DellNet would go next. In June he
told Reuters that Sweden and the Benelux countries were high on
its priority list.
In France, DellNet has partnered with Excite@Home Corp
ATHM.O to provide French-language news and content for its
portal www.dellnet.com/fr.
Users can download DellNet software for free. It works with
Netscape, Microsoft Internet Explorer and other standard browser
programmes. Dell has also begun installing DellNet software on
all of its PCs.
Ballantyne said it was too early to tell how many users
DellNet had because the company expected most users to join the
service after buying new PCs with access software pre-installed.
"We won't be in a position to understand the take-up for at
least a quarter," he said.
The company started offering "free" Internet access in
Britain in May, joining a host of companies such as electronics
retailer Dixons Group Plc DXNS.L, whose Freeserve unit is now
the largest Interent service provider in the UK.
DellNet started in Germany in June.
"Free" Internet services have revolutionised the access
business in Britain and are becoming increasingly popular in
other European countries because they are less expensive than
subscription-based services.
Freeserve, which Dixons plans to partially float, has drawn
scores of imitators backed by retailers, banks and broadcasters.
They have also been a hit in Spain, where even former
monopoly phone company Telefonica SA TEF.MC has switched to a
free offering. In Germany, free providers have had more modest
success against T-Online, a unit of Deutsche Telekom AG
DTEG.F, Europe's largest Internet access provider.
France may be another tough market for Dell and any other
free providers because France Telecom SA FTE.PA is one of the
few European telephone companies that offers unlimited Internet
access for a flat monthly rate.
France Telecom also offers a "free" access option of its
own.
REUTERS
Rtr 07:06 07-08-99

Copyright 1999, Reuters News Service