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To: Jim Baker who wrote (27148)7/27/1999 3:49:00 PM
From: Michael Bakunin  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 41369
 
Internets sold from shortly before 3 ET. No idea why. -mb



To: Jim Baker who wrote (27148)7/27/1999 3:49:00 PM
From: Sarkie  Respond to of 41369
 
Don't know if this has been posted here today.

Interesting news.

news.com

AOL inks high-speed DSL deal with GTE

By Corey Grice
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
July 27, 1999, 10:30 a.m. PT

Making another significant stride into the high-speed Internet sweepstakes, America Online today signed a deal with GTE to use the local phone company's network to bring faster Net access to its dial-up customers.

The multiyear alliance between AOL and GTE gives the online giant access to high-speed digital subscriber line (DSL) Internet technology in GTE's territory, which spans 17 states in the western United States.

AOL and GTE recently joined forces in the fight for so-called open access against cable operators like AT&T. The two firms even staged a demonstration in June to prove that third-party ISP access to cable TV networks can work--something that AT&T has denied.

Today's DSL deal comes in the wake of a loss in the firms' open access fight. Although the companies' lobbying push for so-called open access laws has been successful in two municipalities, the city of San Francisco yesterday declined to immediately impose open access requirements on AT&T.

AOL claims nearly 18 million dial-up customers, but the company still wants to offer its users a faster connection to the Net, as evident in its recent broadband deals. Industry experts have said that high-speed Net connections will give online companies higher profit margins and facilitate e-commerce.

The partnership marks the fourth DSL deal that AOL, the world's largest ISP, has signed with a Baby Bell company.

Last week, AOL signed a similar DSL deal with Ameritech. AOL already had signed DSL partnerships with Bell Atlantic and SBC Communications. Rounding out its high-speed interests, AOL invested $1.5 billion in Hughes Electronics, which offers Net access via satellite with its DirectPC service.

GTE recently cut the price of its DSL service by 17 percent. AOL expects its high-speed version to cost $20 more than its regular monthly cost for dial-up access.

DSL is a high-speed, or broadband, technology that allows standard copper phone wires to carry Internet data at much faster speeds than current dial-up modems. DSL, which allows users to surf the Net and talk on the phone simultaneously, is the chief competitor to cable modems in the residential broadband Net access market.




To: Jim Baker who wrote (27148)7/27/1999 3:52:00 PM
From: Dr. David Gleitman  Respond to of 41369
 
Dear Jam:

it is my observation that in addition to AOL taking a bit of a fall today (hopefully with a full recovery by the end of the day) it also appears that a lot of the Internet type stocks (the new issue IPOs) all appear in the red today. MPPP is really taking it on the chin.

David