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Technology Stocks : Frank Coluccio Technology Forum - ASAP -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (1073)2/3/2000 7:33:00 PM
From: Leeza Rodriguez  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1782
 
Frank, are you familiar with ACEC and their N*vision product?
Apparently Level3 is using this usage based billing product throughout their IP network such that they can granulate billing activity by classes of service.

Any thoughts on this?

thanks,
leeza rodriguez



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (1073)2/5/2000 3:13:00 PM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1782
 
FCC chairman William Kennard plans push for wireless Internet, digital TV

Initiatives aim at bolstering technology

By Kalpana Srinivasan
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 — The nation's
communications chief said Thursday he wants to
spread wireless technology across the country
quickly to revolutionize Americans' daily life,
from the Internet and movies to cars and kitchen
appliances.













What do you think?







‘Today, television
is sort of a passive
exercise. That's
going to be seen as
very much of an
anachronism in the
future.'
— WILLIAM
KENNARD
FCC chairman
IN AN INTERVIEW with The Associated Press,
Federal Communications Commission Chairman William
Kennard said that to achieve that goal, the FCC will auction
more slices of the airwaves for wireless technology and draft
new standards for digital TV.
The delivery of Internet access to wireless devices, such
as cellular phones or hand-held computers, opens new doors
for American consumers, he said.
“It's going to further democratize the Internet. It's going
to make it available to people who can't afford a $5,000 PC
in their home,” Kennard said.
To promote that goal, the commission has set a spring
date to auction valuable portions of the airwaves that many
companies see as “prime real estate” for delivering wireless
Internet service to people on the road and in their homes.
“The goal is to get as much competition out there as
possible,” Kennard said.

MORE ACTIVE TV EXPERIENCE?
Kennard also predicted a change in the way Americans
watch TV. He cited the introduction of personal video
recorders, which allow people to record shows to a hard
drive and assemble channels based on their viewing
preferences, as evidence of how the model of traditional TV
programming is crumbling.
“Today, television is sort of a passive exercise,”
Kennard said. “That's
going to be seen as very
much of an anachronism in
the future.”
Consumers will have
greater ability to sort and
arrange their shows,
dissolving the current
structure of time slots and
scheduled programming,
the FCC chief said.
“The whole economic
model of the network is
going to change pretty
dramatically,” Kennard
said, “because it's not
going to be a world in
which networks compete
to get a certain audience level at a certain period of time. It's
going to be about delivering a certain quality of demographics
24-hours-a-day.”
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The revolution will be pushed along as the industry
makes its transition from analog to digital television, Kennard
added. Digital TV allows broadcasters to squeeze more video
and data into existing channel space. They could use it to
provide sharper pictures or offer additional TV channels for
sports or movies, or stock quotes and other data transmitted
to home computers.
But so far, the road to digital TV has been rocky,
because of wrangling over standards to make the new digital
systems compatible with cable. That's important because
most Americans get their TV via cable. Kennard has set an
April 1 deadline for the industry to arrive at a solution.

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FORCING INDUSTRY'S HAND
On Thursday, Kennard told the AP he has drafted rules,
which he is now circulating to his fellow commissioners, that
would force the industry's hand if they aren't able to devise
standards.
“Americans need digital TV,” he said.
Addressing the unprecedented wave of mergers in the
communications industry, Kennard said his agency must be
“very, very vigilant” about the repercussions of such
mammoth deals. The FCC is currently looking at
combinations between long-distance giants MCI and Sprint,
cable companies AT&T and MediaOne, and local phone
powerhouses Bell Atlantic and GTE, among others.
“There's a lot of pressure on our agency to just rubber
stamp them all,” Kennard said. “We can't do that because
these mergers are fundamentally restructuring the
telecommunications industry.”
Kennard also said he has asked his staff to look into the
history of a rule that forbids companies from owning two or
more networks in certain combinations. If the FCC decides to
relax that limit, it could ease the way for the proposed merger
between media titans CBS and Viacom — which also owns
a half-interest in the UPN network.
The FCC chief also expressed hope that new ways for
accessing multichannel programming would help drive down
cable rates, which the commission stopped regulating in
March.
For example, high-speed Internet connections will make
it more viable for people to watch movies and TV shows on
their home computer, bypassing the typical cable TV outlet,
he said.
“It's going to really accelerate a decrease in pricing that
people pay for video programming,” Kennard predicted.

© 2000 Associated Press.



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (1073)2/8/2000 10:30:00 PM
From: Raymond Duray  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1782
 
Hi Frank,

I think I know enough about this subject to get my size 8 wedged behind a molar, but here goes.

Out here in the boonies, (Tumalo, OR, jest west of Bend)we have a "digital"/analog hybrid cable feed to my house. The MSO is Bend Cable and they seem to be pretty close to the bleeding edge. I just signed up for the digital package and we now get an additional 12 or so TV stations, including Bloomberg TV and ZDTV in my "sports package" (go figure...) which I like and which is clearly being delivered in digital blocks (MPEG-2??) rather than NTSC format. The STB is a GIC 2000 series and we also have several dozen digital audio feeds that we can access as well. I can't tell you exactly how they are dividing the bandwidth, but I also get my Internet connectivity on one channel and still get all the basic TV stations in NTSC format. So, there is some clever thinking going on here. Furthermore, I have been told that I will be able to get telephony services as soon a 1Q01. And I will do so immediately. Of course, it's coax as far as the eye can see. But I have no (meaningful) complaints so far, as far as bandwidth to my headend. Of course, as with everybody on the planet, we could use a bigger backhaul onto the 'bone, and one is in fact in the works.

HTH, Ray

Best, Ray