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To: Black-Scholes who wrote (2833)10/6/1999 12:44:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 6531
 
Broadcom Goes Extreme
Reuters

3:00 a.m. 4.Oct.99.PDT

Broadcom is set to launch a media
company that it expects to speed the
convergence of television and the
Internet, while pumping up the demand
for its own specialty microchips.

See also: Broadcom Adds PC Flavor to
TVs

Irvine, California-based Broadcom is
partnering with Gotcha International, a
privately held maker of surfwear that also
produces magazines and TV programs on
surfing and extreme sports like
snowboarding and skateboarding.

The plan, to be announced Monday, calls
for the new company, Broadband
Interactive Group, or BIG, to acquire
Gotcha's media assets including the
Gotcha.com Web site and a library of
sports footage.

BIG will then develop sports and other
programs that need high speed
networking equipment -- such as that
currently made by Broadcom -- to
produce full-action video for the Internet
and for newly developing interactive
cable TV services.

"We believe this investment will
accelerate the creation of compelling
broadband interactive content, thus
spurring greater demand for the advanced
cable set-top boxes of our customers,"
Broadcom chief executive Henry Nicholas
said in a statement.

Broadband is a cable TV- and
Internet-related term used to describe
the enhancement of electronic circuits to
the home, providing faster service and
more capacity for things like clear video
streaming over the Net and two-way
communications over cable TV lines.

Broadcom specializes in high-tech
equipment and microchips that help make
broadband services work. Thus, any
enhancement to broadband might help
spur sales of its own equipment.

"Because we have such a strong position
in the market, anything that is good for
the market is good for Broadcom,"
Nicholas told Reuters in an interview.

He declined to say how much Broadcom
was investing in BIG, but said it was
poised for success because of the strong
standing of Gotcha in extreme sports and
because the target audience of 10- to
24-year-olds was active on the Internet.

"This is taking an existing media company,
already profitable, and optimizing it for
broadband," Nicholas said. "We're taking
content people already like and enhancing
it."

The move follows similar initiatives by
technology companies to spur broadband,
which allows Internet users to connect at
speeds 5 to 50 times faster than the
fastest dial-up modems.

Last week, software giant Microsoft Corp.
announced an initiative with several
media and technology companies to drum
up support for high-speed Internet
content and its own Internet media
software.

Nicholas said Broadcom is looking to gain
a foothold in mainstream sports, too, by
trying to gain media rights to the Anaheim
Angels professional baseball and Mighty
Ducks hockey teams owned by The Walt
Disney Co.

Nicholas had been named as a possible
buyer of the teams, but last week the
billionaire entrepreneur said he was not
interested in buying or managing a sports
franchise.

He said Broadcom was trying to help
Disney sell the Angels and Ducks to an
unidentified third party that would then
give Broadcom media and interactive
rights to the franchises.

"We are interested in getting the
interactive rights for some sport, and no
sport is better for that than baseball,"
Nicholas said.

Shares in Broadcom rose US$3.50 to end
at $112.50 on the Nasdaq trading system
Friday before the announcement.