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To: Mats Ericsson who wrote (595)10/11/1999 1:52:00 AM
From: SidStock  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 851
 
Hey Mats,

Do u enjoy talking to yourself? :-) Thanks for the links...Been long for quite a while... still holding 1/2 my position...and will put it a way for a while.

Here's another related story.... Sid
___________________________________________

Handheld Devices Spur Internet Boom

Associated Press Online - October 10, 1999 15:09

By ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS

Associated Press Writer

GENEVA (AP) - The boom of the Internet will be further fueled by newer, cheaper browsing
devices appearing on the market as well as by industry investments that will greatly expand
transmission capacity, government and business leaders said Sunday.

Wu Jichuan, Chinese minister of information industry, told the global meeting that China had
made great strides in expanding its telecommunications networks, but that much work remains
to be done to give more Chinese access to the Internet and other services.

"Nearly a quarter of administrative villages have no access to telephone service yet," Wu said.

Industry leaders at the United Nations-sponsored Telecom 99, the biggest gathering yet of
information technology industries, noted that products such as the new WAP-based mobile
phone may be part of the solution for China and other developing countries.

The cellular phone, using the "Wireless Application Protocol," allows the user to see information
from the World Wide Web in the phone's small display window.

IBM chief executive officer Louis Gerstner said the new devices and other handheld
"networked" products - personal digital assistants and pagers - were helping to shift the focus
from the personal computers made by IBM and others.

"The PC itself isn't dead, but it's no longer occupying center stage," Gerstner said.

He noted predictions that there will be 600 million PCs in the world by 2003, but said they
would be joined by more than 2 billion handheld devices and many billions of cars, TVs, tools,
appliances and vending machines all on the Internet.

"In short, we're seeing a proliferation of millions and millions of new - and much lower-cost,
much easier to use - access points, putting the Net within reach of masses of people who could
never afford a PC," Gerstner said.

Senior officials of the Finnish cellphone manufacturer Nokia Corp. told reporters their new
WAP-based mobile 7110 handset should be available to some consumers in Europe within the
next few weeks. It is expected to launched in the United States next year.

Another manufacturer, Alcatel, is planning to market a WAP-based mobile phone in
mid-October.

Volker Jung, a member of the managing board of Siemens AG, said his company will be
pushing to increase its share of the world mobile phone market and would be adding
WAP-based services.

Gerstner said another change will be wrought by "the gazillions of dollars of investment" in
increased "broadband," or high-speed, transmission facilities that will speed access to the
World Wide-Web.

Gerstner said other industry leaders he talks to know that "bandwidth will be nearly as plentiful
as sugar or pork bellies."

John Roth, chief of Nortel Networks, said a just-released study sponsored by his company
forecast "an explosion of bandwith in Western Europe - with Internet users rising from 38
million today to 150 million by 2005."

That won't be a minute too soon in terms of time wasted waiting for Web connections, Roth
said. "An estimated 2.5 billion hours were wasted in 1998 while people waited for Web pages
to download."