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To: Dale Baker who wrote (3487)11/26/2000 5:50:08 PM
From: david james  Respond to of 3541
 
Was looking over Montana Power who sold their energy business for $1.3 billion - then set up another $400 million credit facility. Most of this is to be spent on laying fiber. And where are they going to get the people to do this? Whoever they use gives more business to the remaining companies laying fiber.

biz.yahoo.com

RHK Sees Explosive Growth in Bandwidth Demand

11/21/2000 A new Internet study prepared by telecom analysts RHK for Nortel
Networks [NT] indicates that the demand for bandwidth from global networks could
soar 300-fold in the next 8 to 10 years.

The boom in bandwidth demand will be driven by increased levels of high-speed
Internet access to the home and business, dramatically growing Internet take-up
rates outside of North America, and new disruptive technologies and applications
that will take advantage of fast and cheap access to the network, the study says.

"The current levels of investment in new networks worldwide will expand to meet
coming demand for the Optical Internet," said John Ryan, principal analyst at RHK
and chief author of the study.

"The use of the Internet as a basic tool within the global economy suggests a larger
role for telecom services and systems and revenue growth in all sectors. Clearly, the
bandwidth capacity in place today is dwarfed by what we will need in a year or two,
given the current rates of explosive growth we are seeing," Ryan added.

The Third Wave
The "third wave" of Internet access, which is what RHK calls the adoption of
Ethernet-speed access in the home and gigabit Ethernet access for many
enterprises and institutions, will drive even greater demand for bandwidth. An
explosion in eBusiness and content management is likely to extend today's robust
Internet traffic growth rate of 200 percent per annum well into the decade.

This would take traffic to 300 times the size of today's Internet by the decade's end,
RHK observes, consistent with the traffic growth called for by deployment of
new-generation access technologies.

The RHK analysis, entitled "Internet Traffic and Use: Surging Not Slowing," points to
the rapid growth in high-speed Internet access to the home- both DSL and cable-as
a key driver for surging bandwidth demand. Some 400,000 North American
households per month are adopting high-speed access, the study says.

With DSL or cable modems running at some ten times the speed of a dial- up
modem, these users add directly to demand on the Internet backbone. In addition,
other firms have recently found that high-speed users spend 61 percent more time
on line than a year ago because the high-speed online experience is far more
rewarding.

The explosion of demand applies as well to enterprises where service providers are
"inundated with requests for new, high- bandwidth applications," reports the study.

RHK estimates that by July 2001 there will be some 800 million Internet users
worldwide -- up from 380 million today. Asian growth is phenomenal: China alone is
adding around 2 million Internet subscribers a month, while Korea has 2 million
high-speed households already hooked up. "Trans-pacific capacity is consumed as
fast as it is installed or made available," says RHK.

Behavior Change
The RHK study argues that Internet use is likely to grow well beyond most forecasts
because the widespread availability of fast, nearly-free Internet access will lead to a
change in behavior as people modify their social, business, and entertainment lives
to enjoy new services and applications that will be enabled by a fast, free Internet.
fiberopticsonline.com{D729C580-BF95-11D4-8C7F-009027DE0829}&Bucket=Market+Trends



To: Dale Baker who wrote (3487)11/27/2000 4:37:27 PM
From: david james  Respond to of 3541
 
Bandwidth boom expected to continue unabated

cnetinvestor.com
By: Ben Heskett and Corey Grice, CNET News.com
11/27/00 12:39:00 PM
Source: News.com

Two new telecommunications studies suggest that the ugly fallout under way among cash-poor network operators could result
in more business for the survivors as the need for network capacity grows.

Amid a downturn in the fortunes of several prominent telecommunications carriers, such as PSINet, ICG Communications and
even the venerable AT&T, new studies from industry researchers RHK and Adventis suggest that it will be the remaining
companies that react quickly to market changes that will reap the benefit of what is expected to be a continued boom in
network usage.

RHK recently released a report predicting a 300-fold increase in demand for network
bandwidth in the next eight to 10 years. Another prominent researcher, Boston-based
Adventis (formerly Renaissance Strategy) is also changing its tune, proclaiming in an
upcoming report that high-speed connections to the Net will drive demand for more
capacity among network operators.

"The outlook really is very, very good," said Tracey Vanik, technical director for RHK.
"We don't see any reason to suspect we're at the top of the (growth) curve. We're at
the bottom of the slope."

The correlation between demand for network capacity and the health of network
operators is significant for those that can alter their businesses accordingly, analysts
say.

Telecommunications and Net service providers that focus on data-driven networks
could reap profits as use continues, they say. As more computer users get online and
hog bandwidth, the reasoning goes, the more services telecom providers will be able
to sell them. In turn, equipment companies will continue to reap rewards from sales of
the latest gear to power the boom.

With dozens of new carriers building nationwide fiber-optic networks in recent years,
Renaissance was an early skeptic of the need for all that bandwidth, particularly at a
time when broadband connections weren't yet widely available for many consumers
and businesses. But upcoming research from Adventis, expected in December or
January, says times are changing.

"In the past, the (capacity) supply did not have a distribution channel to the users,"
said Ford Cavallari, executive vice president at Adventis. "You had a great big highway
but no way for people to get on and off. There has been insufficient last-mile
connections" until recently.

For one, many consumers now access the Net using high-speed digital subscriber line
(DSL) or cable modem connections. In addition, high-speed metropolitan area
networks are being built in most major cities to more easily route and deliver backbone
Net traffic.

But some analysts also believe that the bandwidth-hungry applications only dreamed about a few years ago are finally
arriving, meaning communications carriers that have built excessive network capacity at great costs may not look foolish for
long.

"The big catalyst in the last six months has been Napster," Cavallari said. "Napster is consuming huge amounts of bandwidth
on the network. We truly think Napster is the killer app for driving (broadband) adoption."

Adventis believes there is a direct correlation between broadband growth and the rising popularity of digital music and MP3
download sites such as Napster, MP3.com and others.

Similarly, RHK believes high-speed connections and worldwide growth in Net use will drive an expansion of network capacity
and result in opportunities for agile network operators, according to Vanik. She pointed to the recent announcement from
Sprint that it would hike capital spending to more than $6 billion next year, from $5 billion in 2000, to keep up with demand.

RHK also estimates that worldwide users of the Net will more than double by July of next year, from 380 million today to 800
million. As an example, RHK found that subscribers to the Net in China are growing by 2 million per month.

The studies are good news for equipment makers such as Nortel Networks, Cisco Systems, Lucent Technologies and Ciena,
among others, which can only benefit from continued capacity demand despite a current climate of Wall Street skepticism.

"It reaffirms our belief on the impact of the Internet," said Don Smith, president of optical Internet solutions at Nortel. "From an
industry perspective, I think it's important for all of us to get our hands around this."

A third study from Infonetics Research, out Monday, predicts that spending among large nationwide telecommunications
carriers will grow 220 percent, from $13.3 billion this year to $42.5 billion in 2004, further bolstering the notion that capacity
demand will continue as operators scramble to keep up with the latest technology.

Adventis suggests the current swing toward high-speed connections on local networks and among consumers will naturally
lead to a problem in another portion of networks--a moving target for the telecommunications industry.

"There is never really equilibrium in the network. It's a leap frog game," Cavallari said. "Backbone capacity is looking pretty
good, but I don't think there's insufficient bandwidth."