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To: D. K. G. who wrote (5493)10/6/1999 7:30:00 AM
From: Kenneth E. Phillipps  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12823
 
Updated 5:19 AM ET October 6, 1999

news.excite.com

SEATTLE (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp and British Telecommunications
Plc announced plans Wednesday to roll out wireless Internet services in
Europe beginning with a trial involving about 1,000 mobile phone users.

The three-month trial, described as the biggest ever, will allow employees
of five major companies in Britain and Norway to use their wireless
phones to access electronic mail, calendar information and other data including content from Web
pages customized for the small phone screens.

At the end of the test period BT and Microsoft expect a sizeable commercial deployment of the service
in early 2000, according to a statement from the two companies.

The planned service is the fruit of an alliance between the two companies announced in February.

Under the relationship with BT, Microsoft's Exchange Server will be the primary messaging platform
and its microbrowser Web software will be used as the interface for the mobile phones, said Jonathan
Roberts, general manager of Microsoft's Windows CE business.

He said BT, the No. 2 wireless carrier in Britain behind Vodafone AirTouch Plc, likely would charge
either on the basis of minutes used or amount of data transmitted and would pay Microsoft a fee for
the service provided.

Data will be sent using the GSM protocol, which is universal in Europe and allows transmission of both
voice and data at about 9600 bits per second, which is adequate for the limited text that can be
displayed on mobile phone screens, Roberts said.

Customers involved in the trial are British Broadcasting Corp., Credit Suisse First Boston, KPMG,
Nortel Networks, and Telenor Mobil in Norway.

Handsets initially will be supplied by Sagem SA of France and Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. of South
Korea.