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Technology Stocks : IATV-ACTV Digital Convergence Software-HyperTV -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: art slott who wrote (9643)3/3/2000 9:31:00 AM
From: art slott  Respond to of 13157
 
Motorola, iMagicTV help forge the way for interactive TV
By Jim Davis
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
February 15, 2000, 12:40 p.m. PT

Motorola plans to team with Canadian firm iMagicTV to help telecommunications companies offer
interactive TV and Internet content over high-speed phone lines, the company said today.

Motorola and iMagicTV will jointly offer products for integrated interactive TV and Internet services delivered
over broadband networks. The pair will offer Motorola's Streamaster set-top, which was introduced in 1998,
along with iMagicTV's DTV Manager software, which is used to manage services deployed by
telecommunications companies.

Motorola is optimistic that telecom companies will rapidly take to its Streamaster
set-top technology, which uses ordinary copper telephone lines to shuttle data
and voice transmissions simultaneously.

Many U.S. telecom firms are looking to broadcast TV programming over
high-speed digital subscriber lines (DSL), according to Motorola executives. In
doing so, they could incorporate phone, interactive TV, video and Internet
services into one service package and garner a bigger chunk of consumers'
dollars.

"They have all come to the conclusion that it's do or die when it comes to multiple services into the home,"
said Marcel LeBrun, chief executive of iMagicTV. Voice, TV and Internet services are the anchors of that
strategy, but in the future companies will be able to add games-on-demand services and digital VCR-like
services without needing to buy separate hardware.

All of that makes for attractive math to telecom firms, LeBrun said. One Canadian
telecom company that has deployed iMagic's services boosted revenues from
$45 (US $31) per month to around $120 (US $82) per month.

Jacqueline Beauchamp, general manager of Motorola's multimedia systems
division, said she expects more telecom companies to announce TV service
offerings this year, and Motorola will be a part of the action. "We are indeed rolling
out production platforms that aren't just prototypes, and these are not just
(announcements of) trial deployments" that are in the wings, she said.

Although many firms here in the United States and abroad have attempted various
versions of interactive TV, few have been deployed successfully in the mass
market. The so-called Baby Bells are still playing catch up to companies such as
AT&T that are trying to add telephony services over cable networks.

Motorola, in a move to address the convergence of broadband communications,
cable and entertainment industries, earlier this year closed its $11 billion merger
with General Instrument, the largest cable equipment provider in the United States.

Through the merger, Motorola also has a stake in Next Level Communications, a firm that is developing
infrastructure technology for deploying voice, video and telephony services over DSL. Liberate recently
announced a partnership with Next Level to integrate Liberate's software with Next Level's new Residential
Gateway 2000, a single TV set-top box attached to a DSL line that connects to multiple appliances in the
home, including telephones, PCs and TVs.

Like Motorola's Streamaster, Next Level's set-top could eventually be used by telecommunications firms to
provide telephony, video and interactive services on a single line. So far, Motorola's Beauchamp said that
Next Level and Motorola haven't collaborated or coordinated set-top development strategies, but didn't rule
the possibility out, either.



Related news stories
? Canadian firms eye TV over high-speed lines January 25, 2000
? Motorola, GI shake on $11 billion merger September 15, 1999
? Motorola debuts set-top computer September 1



To: art slott who wrote (9643)3/3/2000 12:57:00 PM
From: Bruce Cullen  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 13157
 
Art I tried so hard to get you folks in this one (SPYG) at 11-13 +\-

Then I mentioned (PRM)

O well, PRM options up 500%, ready to buy yet more IATV!

IATV looks to close above moving avg's and technical indicators are ready to cross, shorts would have to notice this on a NASDAQ up 123+ day and the Dow up 255+

Long and strong!

BC
sherwoodcoastsgroup.com