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To: Michael F. Donadio who wrote (17151)10/12/1999 7:16:00 PM
From: Michael F. Donadio  Respond to of 21342
 
From the NN thread:

To: +zbyslaw owczarczyk (13552 )
From: +pat mudge
Thursday, Oct 7 1999 3:07PM ET
Reply # of 13615

Bell Atlantic CEO touts broadband

By Marc Ferranti
InfoWorld Electric

Posted at 10:50 AM PT, Oct 7, 1999
NEW YORK -- Bell Atlantic Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Ivan Seidenberg
on Thursday singled out expansion of broadband services and infrastructure as the
company's most important goal, and said that telecommunications megamergers can be
good, though not always, for businesses and consumers.

"We want to be your preferred broadband supplier," Seidenberg said in a keynote
speech Thursday here at the Internet World trade show. "Broadband is Bell Atlantic's
single most important initiative."

In its current coverage area, a major portion of the East Coast, Bell Atlantic will roll out broadband Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) capability to 10 million of its 22 million customers by the end of the first quarter next year, and 20 million of its customers by the end of next year, he said. Though Bell Atlantic is intent on growing the broadband business in its current region, the pending merger with GTE, due to be finalized in the first quarter next year, also will help Bell Atlantic expand broadband coverage throughout the United States and abroad, he said. After the merger, GTE and Bell Atlantic together will offer DSL broadband capabilities to three-quarters of the major markets in the United States, he said.

As another example of how Bell Atlantic intends to deliver high-speed data services
throughout the country, Seidenberg also noted that the company Thursday morning
announced a deal with Metromedia Fiber Network (MFN) that will give Bell Atlantic
access to MFN's high-bandwidth infrastructure across the United States.

For wireless data, the merger of the wireless assets of Bell Atlantic and U.K. company
Vodafone AirTouch will further fuel Bell Atlantic's ability to get mobile customers
hooked up to the Net, he said. The new company will combine Bell Atlantic Mobile,
AirTouch Cellular, PrimeCo Personal Communications, and AirTouch Paging
businesses. It will also include the cellular and personal communications services assets
of GTE.

Asked whether such giant mergers will mean fewer competitors and fewer options for
customers, Seidenberg said not all megamergers are bad, per se, for users. "We're
dealing with global businesses, and we're dealing with massive investments for
broadband," he said in remarks to the press after his keynote. "You need scale to make
capital investments like that, and you need scale on a global basis to service global
business."

With the need for scale, there will be "three or four or five major [telecom] competitors
in the U.S.," he said. He added, however, that "three or four competitors in any area
gives customers a pretty good choice." In addition, he said, with the need for telecom
companies to generate greater revenue to make the kind of capital investments needed
to expand broadband services, "no one market will support more than three or five
competitors."

However, Seidenberg also pointed to the company's announcement Wednesday with
3Com, whereby the companies will together offer "a DSL-in-a-box" package in retail
outlets in the northeastern U.S., to illustrate that the company is growing "both
organically as well as through mergers," he said.

Asked about the proposed merger between MCI WorldCom and Sprint, announced
this week, Seidenberg said that deal "will have to be closely examined." That deal
concentrates both Internet infrastructure and long-distance services in a way that the
Bell Atlantic-GTE merger does not, he said. The MCI WorldCom-Sprint deal, "in its
current form," is detrimental for competition, he said.

In addition to broadband infrastructure, Seidenberg also cited network services as an
important part of Bell Atlantic's strategy.

"Being an Internet company means more than just delivering pipes," Seidenberg said. "It
means providing professional solutions that help customers manage their networks and
ensure the security of their data."

Among the services Bell Atlantic will be offering are:

-- Virtual private network services, in conjunction with GTE;

-- Remote access services;

-- Web hosting, Internet access services;

-- Addressing business-to-business Internet capabilities with extranets, and network
integration products.

Bell Atlantic Corp., in New York, at www.ba.com.



To: Michael F. Donadio who wrote (17151)10/12/1999 7:25:00 PM
From: Michael F. Donadio  Respond to of 21342
 
Push becomes shove for DSL:

biz.yahoo.com

Wednesday October 6, 6:01 am Eastern Time

<<Company Press Release

SOURCE: Analysys Publications

40 Million Sites Want High-Speed IP Access To Overcome Bottlenecks, Say Analysys

Telecom Operators Will Have No Choice About Deploying Mass-Market High-Speed IP Access


CAMBRIDGE, England, Oct. 6 /PRNewswire/ -- Telecom operators (TOs) who own copper networks are going to have no choice but to deploy mass-market high-speed Internet Protocol (IP) access technologies, such as ADSL, says analysts.

According to a new report entitled IP Local Loop: Accessing the Next Generation Network, published this week by telecoms consultancy Analysys (www.analysys.com), the pressure from the financial markets and from policy makers will be such that any copper network owner which does not deploy high-speed IP access in the near future will be vulnerable to take-over by one that will.

Using a standard copper wire to carry only a single voice channel leaves a valuable asset under-utilized, as it wastes over 90 per cent of the capacity available with current technology.


In the new report, Analysys examines the potential of ADSL, cable modems, broadband wireless and satellite systems for delivering high-speed Internet access to the mass market, and estimates the pent-up demand for this type of service in various regions of the world. Even when allowing for existing deployment, the demand for affordable, high-speed access to the Internet currently far outstrips supply in all regions. (Chart/graphic available on request from Martin Brooke Associates).

''Our forecasts indicate that in 1999 there are around 40 million residential and small business sites worldwide which would buy a high speed IP service if it was offered at prices similar to those already being charged in the USA, compared with about 2 million sites currently connected,'' says Margaret Hopkins, the report's lead author. ''This sort of pent-up demand, which will top 70 million sites by 2003, is a very powerful incentive for network owners to deploy high-speed IP access in the local loop.''

IP Local Loop: Accessing the Next Generation Network is published by Analysys Publications and is available either in paper format or electronically via the Web (www.analysys.com/publish) at a cost of 1295 pounds sterling (US$2330) or 1495 pounds (US$2690), respectively.

Analysys will be exhibiting at Telecom 99 + Interactive 99 (10-17 October) in Geneva (UK Pavilion, stand number 1081.050)

SOURCE: Analysys Publications>>

Michael



To: Michael F. Donadio who wrote (17151)10/12/1999 11:18:00 PM
From: steve s  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21342
 
Michael,
Press release seemed to have all the good buzz words in it, and I like the 20,000 modem shipment milestone statement. I recall MZ mentioning that it would be a good idea to post such a milestone in one of the conference calls a while back. Glad to see him hold to his word. Maybe, just maybe the street will see this and wake up. So far things are looking good for ADSL in general if all is to become reality in the next 9 to 12 months. Big IF.
All in my own opinion,........



To: Michael F. Donadio who wrote (17151)10/15/1999 11:54:00 AM
From: Skiawal  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 21342
 
Michael..I believe the most recent PR out by WSTL on the 20,000 modem shipment milestone was basically to let us know that there will be NO MORE rebates going out!

If you recall, WSTL was giving a $50 rebate on the first 20,000 modems...
westell.com

a 25% discount now just became an extra 25% towards the bottom line...

From Kaufman's (Sine) analyst's report on 09/23/99...<Bell targets 100,000 customers by year end of this year and 500,000 by the end of 2000. If we assume that Westell gets half of this business this year and only one-quarter next, with an average selling price of $200, this works out to be $10 millon in revenue this year and $20 million next year. This would yield 100% revenue growth...>

One other thing, 3COM doesn't even have a working DSL modem out on the street yet...and it is probably safe to say that what ever they come up will be half as good as WSTL's and will probably be more expensive.

Looking forward to hearing more at the earnings conference call next week...LU too!