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To: The Phoenix who wrote (2495)9/29/2000 9:44:35 PM
From: zbyslaw owczarczyk  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3891
 
The Phenix here is report from Dell'Oro about xDSL market.
As you know English is my second language, but I guess you can
read plain English. Show me where Crisco is gaining?
BTW, Flynn is heading former Newbridge which is N.American company. Before he joined, NN did not executed, however they knew better then others where technology is heading
(Cambrian went to NT, LMDS was pushed first by NN, ATM. Also
Alcatel invented ADSL if you did not know)
------------------------------------------------
Alcatel Reaffirmed by Dell'Oro as Worldwide DSL Market
Leader
Paris - August 31th, 2000 - Alcatel (Paris: CGEP.PA and NYSE: ALA) today announced
that new research by Dell'Oro Group has reaffirmed the company's huge worldwide lead
in the ADSL market. Alcatel's ADSL market share as measured by line shipments into
central offices during the second quarter of 2000 increased to 54.2%, more than three
times that of its nearest competitor. Alcatel has shipped more ADSL lines than all other
suppliers combined since volume shipments began in 1998, according to Dell'Oro data.


"In the second quarter of 2000, ADSL continued to be the DSL technology
of choice, representing 76% of all DSL lines shipped," said Willem Verbiest,
vice president responsible for Alcatel's DSL business. "ADSL continues to grow at
the expense of SDSL, and Alcatel is clearly the market and technology
leader in that space."

Moreover, Alcatel's cumulative market share increased ten percentage points over the
same period last year to 54%, while the share of its nearest competitor declined eleven
percentage points to only 13%.


Overall Alcatel shipped more than one million ADSL lines in the second quarter, bringing the
total for the year-to-date to 1.8 million. In June of this year Alcatel up-rated its forecast for
total DSL shipments in 2000 to 5 million, and these latest market figures put the company on
target to achieve that goal.

"The challenge for Alcatel in aggressively growing shipments in the ADSL
market has become one of supply, not demand." said Pearse Flynn, president
of Alcatel's carrier networking group. "Our order book is huge, and our efforts
are shifting so that we can manage our supply chain for the benefit of
our many ADSL customers world-wide, in the face of an industry wide
components shortage. These figures prove that we can do just that."

Alcatel's market share is fuelled by sales to the world's largest and most successful
network operators, most at the beginning of aggressive and large-scale ADSL rollouts. In
North America, SBC Communications, Verizon, Bell South, Bell Canada and New Edge
Networks are in the vanguard of ADSL deployment. There are an estimated 130 million local
copper pairs connecting homes to the telephone network in North America, and each one
is potentially a DSL connection.
The picture in Europe is as positive. Alcatel's high profile European customers include
France Telecom; KPN of the Netherlands; Telefonica of Spain; Telecom Italia; Belgacom;
Swisscom; Telekom Austria. In the UK, BT launched its initial broadband portfolio to service
providers, corporates and other licensed operators on June 29 this year and yesterday
launched its entry-level broadband offering - BT IPStream 500 - using Alcatel's ADSL
modem technology. BT's rollout currently covers 35% of UK households, equating to 7.3
million homes and over 1 million businesses.

Kingston Communications, a competitive service provider in the UK market, is currently
offering one of the most advanced ADSL-based services in the world. Customers have the
option of subscribing to 55 channels of high-quality broadcast digital television, on-demand
movies, fast always-on Internet browsing, email and telephony. Kingston's aggressive
roll-out plans will move up a gear on the advent of local loop unbundling in Europe.

In Asia Pacific major customers include Singapore Telecom; Telstra of Australia; Shanghai
PTA; Hong-Kong Telecom. Hanaro Telecom of Korea is Alcatel's second largest ADSL
customer world-wide. South America is also a burgeoning market for ADSL, and last
quarter Alcatel shipped to customers in Brazil, Mexico, Argentina and Chile.

Mr. Flynn added: "The textbooks say that when you have more than double
the market share of your nearest competitor in a tornado market, you own
that market. Alcatel is the 'A' in ADSL."

About Alcatel DSL
Alcatel is the world's leading supplier of DSL solutions, helping service providers
everywhere deploy an expanded range of revenue producing offerings and applications
such as high speed Internet access, voice over DSL, and video services. Alcatel's DSL
solutions are available on a variety of service platforms, including the Alcatel 7300 and
7350 ASAM; the Litespan NGDLC; and environmentally hardened DSLAM packages
optimized for remote terminal deployment, the Alcatel RAM (Remote Access Multiplexer)
and mini-RAM. This complete set of deployment options gives service providers the
flexibility to bring DSL service to all potential subscribers in their service areas, regardless
of network topology. A unified element management solution, AMS (Access Management
System), manages voice and data services for the Litespan and the ASAM product family.
The Alcatel 46020 Network Manager, an integrated scalable network management solution,
seamlessly manages these products at the network and service layers. Alcatel's DSL
technology is also offered in an advanced range of customer premises equipment, the
Alcatel Speed Touch" family of DSL modems, routers, and integrated access devices
supporting multi-line voice and data service over a single telephone access line. For more
information on Alcatel's DSL solutions, visit alcateldsl.com

About Alcatel
Alcatel builds next generation networks, delivering integrated end-to-end voice and data
networking solutions to established and new carriers, as well as enterprises and
consumers worldwide. With 120,000 employees and sales of EURO 23 billion in 1999,
Alcatel operates in more than 130 countries.

Contact press@www.alcatel.com



To: The Phoenix who wrote (2495)10/1/2000 6:28:31 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 3891
 
Another European "success" story: Jim Norton calls for Bonfield's head, as BT's troubles mount

BT's Internet woes continue Thursday as head of e-business at the Institute of Directors Jim Norton calls for chairman Sir Peter Bonfield to be sacked.

It comes at the end of a day when both Microsoft and Colt Telecom launch stinging attacks on the telco for its rollout of ADSL and local loop unbundling.

Norton is equally scathing of BT's handling of both the narrowband and broadband access markets and agrees it is time Bonfield resigned. "He has lost the plot," he says.

Norton sees no reason why the UK should be so far behind when other European countries like Denmark had ADSL rolled out a year ago. He believes that fixed line Internet services are in danger of losing out to mobile unless BT gets it act together. "If BT doesn't get ADSL sorted people will leave the fixed network in droves and turn to 3G," he says.

He is not much happier with Oftel, who he accuses of being far too lenient on the telco. "The timetable set for unbundling is just not challenging enough for BT," he claims.

A BT spokesman was quick to defend the BT chairman, claiming shareholders are more than happy with his performance. "Everyone is entitled to their opinion but there is clearly a lot of support for him in the City. BT is currently going through a transformation," he says.

Norton disagrees claiming the City abandoned Bonfield when the MCI WorldCom deal fell through. "I feel quite sorry for him [Bonfield]. The City bullied BT over the deal and then abandoned it. Bonfield never recovered from losing the MCI deal."

He has some advice for the beleagured telco. ""BT needs to get ADSL out fast, it need to get hold of some fixed wireless licenses and focus on CellNet because the future lies in mobility."

BT meanwhile accuses rivals of "huffing and puffing". "The market is getting more and more competitive and telcos are trying to get advantage over one another by having a pop at BT," says a BT spokesman. He claims critics like WorldCom have been hypocritical. "WorldCom is criticising the slowness of BT over unmetered but all the while it is raking it in on the pence per minute deal."

The spokesman also lays down a challenge to Microsoft over its criticism that BT is holding back the broadband revolution. "Microsoft isn't short of a few bob. Why don't they come in and put some money into broadband Britain?"

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