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To: Jay Tok who wrote (9568)2/9/2000 6:30:00 PM
From: Rono  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10227
 
Nextel Partners is an exclusive affiliate of Nextel established about a year ago to accelerate buildout in mid-sized and smaller domestic markets. They currently hold wireless licenses covering about 40 million pops and will ultimately offer services under the Nextel brand in 51 of the top 200 metropolitan statistical areas.

Nextel owns about 36% of their common stock.

Here is a link to their prospectus:

freeedgar.com

A printed copy is available by calling the prospectus department of Goldman Sachs at 212-902-1171.

After the IPO NXTP should have a market cap of about $4 billion, or about 10% of NXTL's.

Hope this helps.

Ron



To: Jay Tok who wrote (9568)2/10/2000 12:08:00 AM
From: michael  Respond to of 10227
 
Nextel Close to Deal With eDispatch

by Adam Peeler
adam@stockgroup.com

February 8, 2000

Wireless giant Nextel Communications Inc. (NASDAQ: NXTL) is expected to sign a deal with small cap equipment provider
eDispatch (CDNX: EWD) by the end of the month, a Nextel spokesman said today.

"We haven't announced anything with eDispatch but they're really the only one out there," said
Nextel's investor relations manager Paul Blalock. "We're getting close to an announcement,
there'll probably be something at the Wireless 2000 conference at the end of February."

The sixth largest wireless service provider in the United States stopped short of announcing the
deal Friday with eDispatch.com (CDNX: EWD) and this week, investors showed their
disappointment by driving the stock down 55 cents below Friday's close of $12.50.

But both the Nextel spokesman and an analyst indicated today that it's only a matter of time before eDispatch signs a deal to supply
the $33 billion Nextel Communications Inc. with its wireless dispatching technology.

On Friday, eDispatch announced it signed an evaluation agreement with Nextel. Rob Millham, a high tech analyst who covers
eDispatch says it's all part of the courtship process.

"The fact that the arrangement is an evaluation agreement and not a commercial agreement is a disappointment to the market but it
shouldn't be," said Millham. He has revised his target for eDispatch from $C4 in November to $C7 in January, and now to $C15.

At mid-day today, eDispatch was trading at $C11.75, off $C0.40. It has ranged from a high of $C15 to a low of $C0.50.

"While the term 'evaluation agreement' may suggest only a tentative arrangement, we believe there is much more substance to this
announcement than meets the eye," Milham added.

eDispatch is one of two publicly traded companies, the other being Mobile Data Solutions Inc. (NASDAQ: MDSI), with dispatching
software for use over Internet-based wireless networks that in effect turns a 'smart phone', or data phone, into a mobile computer
terminal with an Internet portal for receiving orders.

In other words, the software combined with the Internet and communication products offers a more efficient system for companies to
organize their workers in the field.

Millham, whose company was involved in two previous rounds of financing with eDispatch, calls wireless dispatching one of the next
hot applications for wireless carriers. He explained communication between cell phone or radio takes more time and resources than
Internet dispatching so he expects every wireless carrier within a year to offer a dispatch product to their customers.

"Evaluation agreements are part of the normal protocol within the telecom industry," he said. "It is a process that progresses from a
non-disclosure agreement, to an evaluation agreement and finally, to a commercial agreement."

If the deal indeed comes to fruition, eDispatch will be at the center of an industry that's estimated to be worth $1 billion in sales the
next two years, according to Millham. He said eDispatch could see $C300 million in annualized revenue from Nextel by 2004 if 'the
evolving business plan is met'.

In the past two years eDispatch CEO Brian Ellis has helped bring the company out of relative obscurity. In 1998, the firm was called
InStep Mobile Communications Inc., which specialized in dispatch software for taxi fleets. Then the company switched gears.

"Last October it seems like the words 'wireless' and 'Internet' finally got married," said eDispatch CEO Brian Ellis. "It's funny but if
someone had invested $C25,000 last January in eDispatch, you'd have over a $C1 million today. That's significant for a small
company playing in a global space."

Ellis said Nextel and eDispatch have started beta testing the dispatch service with a few of Nextel's customers.

"Telecommunications firms typically sign their agreements after they're successful," said Ellis. "When the beta testing is successful
the service can be launched. At this point and time (the prospect of signing a deal with Nextel) is as good as it gets."

In addition to Nextel, Ellis said eDispatch is targeting the top 15 telecommunications companies in North America as potential
customers.

"We believe 80 per cent of all wireless Internet applications for the next three years will be sold through these people so it's the
quickest way to enhance our revenues."

In September of 1999, eDispatch closed a deal with its first big customer- Southern LINC, which is a subsidiary of the Southern
Company, the largest electrical utility in the US.



To: Jay Tok who wrote (9568)2/12/2000 9:12:00 PM
From: michael  Respond to of 10227
 
The go-to guys
A wireless system that tells service people where to go is propelling eDispatch to stardom.
By Paul Kaihla | February 21, 2000
"When the market is hungry," old hands on the Street like to say, "feed it." These days, the market is absolutely ravenous for anything to do with wireless. To gauge the fury of the current feeding frenzy for this brand of high-tech chow, look no further than eDispatch, a Vancouver-based software firm that has married the Internet with wireless dis-patching. Great concept, but consider the risks in this play. For starters, the technology has no commercial track record. Furthermore, the stock's origins are on the Vancouver Stock Exchange, hardly the world's most illustrious. For most of its three-year history as a public company, eDispatch.com Wireless Data Inc. (CDNX: EWD) has languished as an obscure penny stock–trading at about 50¢ in early January 1999. It has 29 employees, a tiny float of 25 million shares, has never turned a profit, and when it first came to Bay Street looking for money last year, none of the heavy hitters would touch it.

Enter the wireless feeding frenzy that took hold this past fall. That's when eDispatch began serving up buckets of stock. In October, it announced a private placement with the hope of raising $4 million through special warrants convertible to shares priced at $2.05. It raised more than three times that amount–$13.8 million–all of it from Canadian small-cap mutual funds and boutique brokerages. Then, three months later, a Bay Street gorilla joined the feast. On Jan. 26, CIBC World Markets Inc. led a syndicate in a private placement for eDispatch valued at a whopping $31.5 million. This time, the warrants were priced at $10.50. That day, the stock closed at an all-time high of $14.10, which represents a one-year return of 2,720%. "Last April, I came to the Street with exactly the same story," eDispatch president and CEO Brian Ellis, 49, mused a day after the financing announcement last month. "They wouldn't give me the time of day. It's now 48 hours since I arrived in Toronto and I'm walking away with $30 million. Ya gotta love Bay Street."

The basis for all of the sudden glamour and hype? EDispatch just happens to be the only publicly traded, Web-based company in a sector that IT consultants in the US estimate will balloon from almost nothing to more than US$1 billion in annual sales in the next two years. Rob Millham, an analyst with an eye for high-growth tech stocks who works in the Vancouver office of Research Capital Corp. (the brokerage participated in eDispatch's last two financings), calls wireless dispatching the next "killer application" for cellular and PCS service providers. The argument goes that, to get a leg up on each other in their explosive and fiercely competitive market, wireless telcos will all launch a series of added-value services for business customers–and wireless dispatching will be at the top of the list. To wit, on the heels of eDispatch's $30-million financing, Nextel Communications Inc. (Nasdaq: NXTL) was expected to announce that it has chosen eDispatch as the exclusive wireless dispatching technology that it will market to its more than four million subscribers. The sixth-largest wireless provider in the US, Nextel is one of the visionary companies that is shaping the future wireless universe. Millham projects that the deal could bring eDispatch $150 million in annual revenue by 2002. He also expects eDispatch to achieve a 20% net margin. That, in turn, would bring earnings per share of more than $1–and give today's lofty stock price a more rational forward multiple.

Nextel's expected deal with eDispatch represents a powerful endorsement of the Vancouver company's technology. "Landing Nextel is going to create a snowball effect," says Millham. "EDispatch is talking to three or four other telcos. Whoever gets out of the gate and gets a relationship with the telcos first is going to have a huge entrenchment in this sector."

For such a big future, eDispatch's technology has decidedly puny roots. Before changing its name in late 1998, the company was called InStep Mobile Communications Inc. It provided dispatching software to taxi fleets in Vancouver and other cities, who used it to transmit orders to proprietary digital terminals in fleet cars from a central computer. "I told them to get out of the taxi business because it's a slug's game," says eDispatch's 65-year-old chairman Peter Bradshaw, a founder and former chairman of competitor MDSI Mobile Data Solutions Inc.

Instead, the firm developed dispatching software for use over Internet-based wireless networks that essentially turns a "smart phone," or data phone, into a mobile computer terminal with an Internet portal for receiving orders. Each phone is implanted with an Internet browser, which was developed by California-based Phone.com Inc. Bradshaw's company also shifted its business strategy, deciding to team up with wireless carriers who would market the dispatching service to customers such as utilities and other enterprises with workers who live on the road.

In September, eDispatch signed up its first big customer, Southern LINC, which is a subsidiary of the Southern Company, the largest electrical utility in the US. It is also a wireless carrier with an obscene number of cellular sites: it provides blanket coverage across 329,000 square kilometres of Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi and Florida. It is selling eDispatch's service to clients such as Birmingham Water Works and Sewer Board in Alabama. Here's how it works. The dispatch system is programmed with each worker's location, schedule, equipment and expertise. When a customer calls the local utility asking for a worker to fix a burst hot-water pipe, the Birmingham dispatcher, working in Internet Explorer, types the job information into the eDispatch screen. "The computer will know that the job takes about three hours," explains Bradshaw, "and the program thinks, ‘We can't give that job to Tom because he only has two hours before he goes into overtime; we can't give it to Dick because he doesn't have the right tools; but we can give it to Harry, who happens to be in that zone.' It selects the optimum worker for each job." Once the worker is selected, the system transmits the data, which goes through a hosted server and over Southern LINC's wireless network. The customer's name, phone number, location and details of the work order then appear on the screen of the worker's interactive phone. "The nice part about it is that the product is far less expensive than MDSI's offering," says Bob McWhirter, a Royal Bank Investment Management Inc. vice-president who is one of Canada's largest high-tech institutional investors (but does not own any eDispatch). "It's intriguing."

Even more intriguing is where eDispatch's dizzying stock price will go next. It has about a dozen Canadian institutional investors supporting it, and Ellis is hoping to get a TSE listing in the first half of this year. The stock also has little exposure to US investors, so you'd think there'd be some upside when Ellis launches a road show there this spring, with an eye on a future Nasdaq listing. But a word of caution. Some portfolio managers worry that eDispatch's small staff will not be able to implement its service with Nextel and simultaneously sign up new telcos. The firm also has several US competitors who will undercut it if it fumbles when rolling out its product. And at least one investor complains that Ellis lacks experience in dealing with the Street. He says the CEO hyped expectations for a deal with Nextel among institutional investors throughout the last few months of 1999, which raises the spectre of selective disclosure and leaks to competitors. "Quite honestly, he shouldn't have even been using the word Nextel in a sentence," says Peter Hodson, a portfolio manager who runs Synergy's Canadian Small Cap Class fund. But for the moment, Hodson isn't about to sell his $285,000 stake in eDispatch. "There are lots of examples of stocks that have gone from zero to heroes just because they have a wireless base," he quips. "This is one of them."

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