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To: RickM who wrote (50090)11/15/1999 1:48:00 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
New service gives Palm users Web access, email
By Wylie Wong
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
November 15, 1999, 10:40 a.m. PT

OpenSky, a start-up funded by 3Com, today inked a deal with AT&T to offer wireless Internet service to Palm handheld users and
changed its company name.

Now calling itself OmniSky, the company will launch a nationwide beta program for a wireless Net service for Palm V users in
December. As reported earlier, the service will allow Palm users to access Web sites and send email.

AT&T will provide nationwide wireless service for the new offering over its Internet Protocol (IP)-based wireless network and will also
market OmniSky's service. OmniSky plans to officially launch the service in the first quarter of 2000.

OmniSky's beta program is open to the first 5,000 people who register. The company plans to offer a
special pricing deal for the beta run. For $299, customers will get a Palm V thin wireless modem and
unlimited Internet access until March 31, 2000.

The deal is the first service to come from OmniSky, created from the combination of 3Com and
wireless data network software maker Aether Technologies. OmniSky, run by former 3Com and
Infoseek executives, plans to expand services to Windows CE devices, pagers and cell phones.

OmniSky is one of a growing number of firms offering wireless Internet service for handheld devices.
3Com offers a wireless Net service, called Palm.Net, to Palm VII users. Last November, Microsoft
and Qualcomm created a company called Wireless Knowledge, and Oracle recently announced
software called Portal-To-Go.

All these companies plan to work with telecommunications carriers to offer handheld users access
to email, Internet content, and corporate data over the Web.

OmniSky is using 3Com's "Web-clipping" technology, which pares down information from a Web site and fits it into the small screen
of a Palm device.

Separately, Cisco Systems added new technology to its Universal Broadband Router lines of devices, based on a standard for fixed
wireless communications announced by Cisco last month. The router line allows businesses and homes to use a wireless
connection to access the Net, even in highly congested areas.




To: RickM who wrote (50090)11/15/1999 2:43:00 PM
From: freeus  Respond to of 152472
 
LOL!
But shouldnt you save jokes for BAD days? We are all grinning anyway!

OOPS maybe we arent, just looked at the price, unchanged, how dare they?