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To: BillyG who wrote (43900)8/16/1999 2:46:00 PM
From: tony schwarz  Respond to of 50808
 
(COMTEX) B: DSL Deployment Surges Well Beyond Projections; Grows 5 Ti
B: DSL Deployment Surges Well Beyond Projections; Grows 5 Times Faster Than
Cable in 6-Month Period

BOSTON, Aug 16, 1999 (BUSINESS WIRE via COMTEX) -- Installation of
Digital Subscriber Lines (DSLs) grew 300 percent in the United States
for the first half of 1999, surging well beyond industry analysts'
projections, according to data just released by TeleChoice, Inc. During
the same timeframe, cable modem installations grew at the much slower
pace of 60 percent, based on 800,000 cable modems in service in the
U.S. reported by industry analysts in July 1999.

TeleChoice, a telecommunications management consultancy that closely
tracks the broadband access industry, releases DSL deployment
statistics on a quarterly basis. The company has tracked actual
deployment numbers for nearly two years. Its analysis is available at
xdsl.com, which also
may be reached through the company's home page at www.telechoice.com.

DSL modem technology, which permits ultra-fast, constant access to the
Internet over ordinary copper telephone lines, is the prime competitive
threat to high-speed cable modem Internet connections.

Deployment of lines in service in the U.S. grew to 159,150 by the end
of the second quarter 1999, more than tripling since fourth quarter
1998 and more than doubling since first quarter 1999. With about two
years in the marketplace, cable service has a good six-month lead on
DSL and recently reached the million mark, with 800,000 lines in the
U.S., according to industry reports.

"Putting this into the perspective of head-to-head competition, while
cable modem service maintains a healthy lead, DSL is growing at a
significantly faster pace and catching up rapidly," said Laurie
Falconer, DSL analyst at TeleChoice. "It may mean the technology has
found its legs and is poised to reach its expected exponential market
growth much sooner than most believed six months ago.

"Until recently, the focus of the LECs (Local Exchange Companies) had
been on deployment of Central Office (CO) equipment," Falconer
continued. "Now that most of the major markets have DSL deployed in the
COs, the market can grow very quickly. Of the 22,000 COs in the U.S., 3,
742 are now deployed with DSL equipment, and they include the 600 to
700 COs that generate most of thebusiness."

The family of DSL technologies, which typically is denoted as xDSL and
includes DSL, ADSL, SDSL, and VDSL, employs digital coding techniques
to squeeze up to 99 percent more capacity from a phone line. The
technology uses the line's higher frequencies to transmit data, leaving
lower frequencies free to simultaneously transmit voice or faxes.

Depending on line conditions, xDSL provides speeds of up to 8 Mbps (up
to 52 Mbps with VDSL) downstream (to the user) and up to 1 Mbps
upstream (up to 2.3 Mbps for VDSL)--up to 30 times faster than the best
analog modems, which top out at 56 Kbps. High transmission speed is
considered crucial to such Internet applications as interactive
multimedia, multi-player gaming, video on demand and video catalogs.



About TeleChoice:

TeleChoice provides business and market strategy consulting to the
telecommunications industry worldwide. Applying hands-on experience and
user insight, TeleChoice helps clients enter promising markets and
expand existing ones, so they gain market presence faster, attain
profitability sooner and build sustainable competitive advantage.



Copyright (C) 1999 Business Wire. All rights reserved.
-0-
CONTACT: Laurie Falconer
(972) 492-7048

WEB PAGE: businesswire.com

GEOGRAPHY: MASSACHUSETTS

INDUSTRY CODE: COMED
COMPUTERS/ELECTRONICS
INTERACTIVE/MULTIMEDIA/INTERNET
TELECOMMUNICATIONS

Today's News On The Net - Business Wire's full file on the Internet
with Hyperlinks to your home page.

*** end of story ***



To: BillyG who wrote (43900)8/16/1999 2:46:00 PM
From: Stoctrash  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50808
 
Yes..I agree on the details. The thing it does indicate though is that their latest purchases of code are being integrated into new chips at breath taking speed (no pun intended). Also, in the past when they've said "we have a chip"...they end up coughing up the goods pretty fast.

How many BRCM shares would you like for your CUBE...
1 for 2?...I can live with that.

Ps...should I go into politics since I can change my mind so fast?<GGG>