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To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (10333)2/5/2001 4:09:03 PM
From: Chas.  Respond to of 12823
 
Thanks Frank, that answers my question very nicely, appreciated.



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (10333)2/5/2001 5:42:55 PM
From: Mkilloran  Respond to of 12823
 
Frank...new settop boxes with cable modem on a single chip:

Monday February 5, 6:01 am Eastern Time
Press Release

another way to play - the hardware angle

biz.yahoo.com

Conexant First to Combine Interactive Television Capability and Broadband Internet Connectivity in Single-Chip Solution
Conexant's Cable Set-Top Box Solution Offers Industry-Leading Features, Including Support For Popular Personal Video Recording Applications, Coupled With Unmatched Flexibility For Global Manufacturers
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 05, 2001-- Conexant Systems, Inc. (Nasdaq:CNXT - news) Monday announced an industry-leading, single-chip digital cable transceiver solution that combines simultaneous cable-modem functionality and interactive cable broadcast capability for set-top box applications.

In addition, the CX24420 provides the necessary features to support multiple broadcast demodulation necessary for personal video recording (PVR) functionality, which lets consumers record, pause, rewind and fast-forward a television program in real-time.

Conexant's solution not only provides the ideal platform for enhancing the features of next-generation digital set-top boxes, but also enables OEMs to reduce the bill-of-materials (BOM) cost of cable set-top boxes by at least $130 -- more than a 25 percent reduction for typical designs.

In addition, Conexant's cable set-top box chip gives manufacturers flexibility to support multiple global standards, and to easily upgrade their products via the product's software media access controller (MAC) to accommodate new standards.

The CX24420 leverages the company's extensive cable-modem portfolio, particularly its programmable MAC technology. Conexant's success and pedigree in DOCSIS and DVB/DAVIC MAC technology provided a strong foundation for the development of the chip, which helps customers develop interactive, standards-compliant system solutions in the shortest time possible.

In addition, the CX24420 is designed to seamlessly interface with the company's single-chip MPEG-2 solutions -- as well as its silicon tuner implementations -- to provide a complete end-to-end solution for cable set-top boxes.

''Our latest set-top box device is truly a design breakthrough that combines cable TV with Internet connectivity and is configured to integrate with Conexant's home-networking technologies including voice over IP (VoIP) solutions. The chip will enable a new generation of advanced home gateways and interactive set-top appliances,'' said Anthony Simon, director of marketing for cable set-top platforms in Conexant's Digital Infotainment Division.

''In addition, the CX24420 delivers a full-featured solution to support the current and emerging cable television standards throughout North America, Europe and Japan. Our solution not only gives manufacturers the flexibility they need to quickly design products for an ever-changing marketplace, but also provides a reduced-cost solution that will bring high-end, set-top box functionality within reach of mainstream consumers for the first time.''

According to technology research firm Cahners In-Stat Group, cable-modem functionality is expected to become a standard feature in high-end set-top boxes over the next two years, and digital cable set-top box shipments are poised to grow from 10.3 million in 2000 to 15.7 million in 2003.

''We believe that home-gateway solutions, combining simultaneous digital video and Internet connectivity in a single device, will be a key driver of set-top box market growth in the next several years,'' said Mike Paxton, senior analyst with In-Stat.

''By integrating multiple functions into a cost-effective, single-chip offering, Conexant's silicon solution is an ideal enabler for this new class of set-top appliances.''

The CX24420 is the only solution available with integrated quadruple demodulator paths together with dual return channel paths -- enabling it to manipulate two input video streams for PVR applications and simultaneously support in-band, cable-modem functionality -- as well as a transceiver supporting out-of-band interactive TV functionality. The device's unique processor and memory architecture enable this simultaneous multi-function capability.

This architecture also eliminates the need for consumers to add expensive cable-modem, network-interface modules (NIMs) into their set-top boxes. In addition, the solution further helps reduce costs through integrated analog blocks, as well as integrated I/O interfaces such as peripheral component interconnect (PCI), Ethernet and universal serial bus (USB).

To meet the needs of global manufacturers, Conexant's cable set-top-box chip supports a variety of set-top box and cable-modem standards including DVS-178, DVS-167, DOCSIS 1.0/1.1, EuroDOCSIS 1.0, DVB, and DAVIC 1.2 and 1.5.

Packaged in a ball grid array (BGA), the CX24420 will be priced at $45 in quantities of 100,000 units. Samples will be available this month, with production volumes available in calendar Q3 2001.

About Conexant Systems, Inc.

With revenues of $2.1 billion in fiscal 2000, Conexant is the world's largest independent company focused exclusively on providing semiconductor solutions for communications electronics. With more than 30 years of experience in developing communications technology, the company draws upon its expertise in mixed-signal processing to deliver integrated systems and semiconductor products for a broad range of communications applications.

These products facilitate communications worldwide through wireline voice and data communications networks, cordless and cellular wireless telephony systems, personal imaging devices and equipment, and emerging cable and wireless broadband communications networks.

The company organizes its activities into two business areas: Internet infrastructure, which consists of the Network Access products, and personal networking, comprised of Digital Infotainment, Personal Imaging, Wireless Communications and Personal Computing products. Conexant is a member of the S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100 Indices. For more information, visit Conexant at www.conexant.com.

Conexant's Digital Infotainment Division is a leading provider of semiconductor systems for broadband and broadcast communications applications. Addressing the convergence of PCs with consumer entertainment products, the division's broad portfolio includes cable and wireless modems, IP telephony products, digital set-top boxes and digital broadcast and video solutions for personal computing appliances.

Safe Harbor Statement

This news release contains statements relating to future results of Conexant (including certain projections and business trends) that are ''forward-looking statements'' as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results may differ materially from those projected as a result of certain risks and uncertainties. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to: maintaining a consistent and reliable source of energy; global economic and market conditions, such as the cyclical nature of the semiconductor industry and the markets addressed by the company's and its customers' products; demand for and market acceptance of new and existing products; successful development of new products; the timing of new product introductions; the availability and extent of utilization of manufacturing capacity; pricing pressures and other competitive factors; changes in product mix; fluctuations in manufacturing yields; product obsolescence; the ability to develop and implement new technologies and to obtain protection for the related intellectual property; the successful separation of the company's Internet infrastructure and personal networking businesses; the ability to attract and retain qualified personnel; labor relations of the company, its customers and suppliers; and the uncertainties of litigation, as well as other risks and uncertainties, including but not limited to those detailed from time to time in the company's Securities and Exchange Commission filings. These forward-looking statements are made only as of the date hereof, and the company undertakes no obligation to update or revise the forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contact:

Conexant Systems, Inc., Newport Beach
Carol Thornton (editorial), 949/483-7413
carol.thornton@conexant.com
or
Benjamin Group/BSMG Worldwide
Roslyn Whitehurst, 949/260-1300
roslyn_whitehurst@benjamingroup.com


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (10333)2/6/2001 8:35:04 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12823
 
Was the Telecoms Act of 1996 a fiasco? ADSL's death seem to prove it was.

Remaking the Telecommunications Act
By Patrick Ross
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
February 5, 2001, 10:55 a.m. PT
WASHINGTON--About the only agreement among telecom companies, regulators and legislators is that the landmark Telecommunications Act of 1996 didn't quite work.

As the law marks its fifth anniversary Wednesday, the chorus here has never been louder for it to be modified, if not altogether reworked. Critics have specifically cited the lack of competition in the local phone and broadband markets--issues the Act was supposed to have addressed.

There is a woeful lack of consensus on what change is needed, however, or who is to blame for the Act's failures. Congress points to the Federal Communications Commission, regulators blame the courts, and the industries blame each other.

This week's anniversary will involve a flurry of announcements from key members of Congress outlining their agendas for remaking the Act. The strongest momentum right now appears to be in support of loosening regulations on Bell companies so they can better compete in broadband, a move competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs) say could mean the end of local phone competition.

Newly appointed House Committee on Commerce Chairman Billy Tauzin, R-La., "would like to finish the work on the Act," said spokesman Ken Johnson. "The intent of the Act was to deregulate telecommunications, but we don't have competition in broadband." Still, he said Tauzin didn't see the bill as a total failure, as it "did bring us lower telephone rates and wireless competition."

Subcommittee on Telecommunications, Trade, & Consumer Protection Ranking Democrat Ed Markey of Massachusetts, however, doesn't see any legislative proposals out there that would improve competition. "We would not advise a reopening of the Act," said his telecommunications adviser Colin Crowell.

Broadband competition at issue
In the high-speed broadband Internet market, cable companies were quick to serve residential customers. Bells were much slower to offer DSL service to people's homes, although they have been much quicker in the last year. Bell companies argue that greater regulation on their broadband service has put them at a disadvantage.

One irony of the Telecommunications Act debate is that the CLECs accuse the Bells of stalling in the local phone market to maintain a regulatory advantage, while the Bells accuse cable companies of stalling in the broadband market for the very same reason.

Broadband providers such as cable companies "have tried to freeze out the Bells as long as they could" in the broadband market, Johnson said.

In the last Congress, Tauzin and House Committee on Commerce Ranking Democrat John Dingell of Michigan co-sponsored a bill that would have allowed Bells to enter the long-distance data market to further broadband competition. The bill was co-sponsored by a majority of the House but was later blocked.

Tauzin and Dingell are working on a new version of the bill that should be introduced soon. Staff members didn't address what specifics the new version might contain, but several sources said it could evolve to the point of declaring the broadband market for all providers--not just cable and DSL but satellite, wireless and others--off-limits for regulation.

"We hope (the bill) comes back and comes back quickly," said Gary Lytle, interim president of the United States Telecom Association (USTA), which represents incumbent phone companies including Bells, although for now USTA would prefer the earlier version of the bill.

Others are skeptical of a bill covering all broadband services. "Something like that would be doomed to fail," said Markey aide Crowell. "It's too much of a greedy grab" by the Bells and cable companies, he said.

No cable company has stepped forward to support such a bill, however, and they are already essentially deregulated in broadband. AT&T Vice President for Congressional Affairs Peter Jacoby denied that his company had participated in any discussions with Bells on the subject, despite rumors that Verizon Communications Senior Vice President for Public Policy Tom Tauke has been talking to cable companies about collaboration on the issue.

The idea of letting Bells handle long-distance traffic, even if it is data and not voice, riles CLECs, which argue that the Telecommunications Act was explicit in requiring Bells to fully open their networks to competitors before gaining access to long-distance business.

"It is critical that Congress strongly oppose any legislation that would give the Bells unnecessary and unwarranted 'relief' from the long-distance restrictions to provide data and other broadband services without first allowing competition for local telecom services," CLEC association CompTel argued in a recent policy paper.

Competition is still lacking even in states where a Bell has gained entry to the long-distance market, said Jacoby. "We're going to take that case to Capitol Hill and the FCC," he said. Still, he felt it was possible competition could be achieved through better implementation of the Act. "The structure of the Act is still intact and still working," he said.

Tauzin, however, doesn't believe the long-distance market is lucrative enough to lure the Bells into giving up significant local market share anyway. "In a matter of years we won't even be quibbling about long-distance competition," said Johnson. "Companies are going to be giving it away with broadband services."

Last year saw the decline in the long-distance market painted starkly in the free fall of AT&T, WorldCom and Sprint. The three lost more than half their market value as the long-distance sector continued to post double-digit revenue declines.

"The price wars in long-distance have moved companies away from voice," said Andersen Consulting partner Gene Michaelson, a telecommunications analyst. "The battle is over data" both in the markets and in Congress, he said.

Bells just want to see all broadband services unregulated, said SBC Communications spokesman Matt Miller. Regulating a Bell's DSL service doesn't foster the spread of that service, he said, adding "this is a regulatory environment that is plagued with uncertainty."

That uncertainty is making it hard for network equipment businesses trying to strike optical deals with Bells, said Sycamore Networks CEO Dan Smith. Speaking at ComNet in Washington last week, Smith decried the regulatory burdens on telecommunications providers. "I would open it up (broadband networks) to all comers," he said, adding "I would reduce the FCC to three people who would manage the radio frequency spectrum."

FCC under the gun
"If we made one mistake in 1996 (with the passage of the Act) it was not making changes to the FCC," Johnson said. Tauzin is having discussions with his successor as House commerce telecommunications subcommittee chairman, Fred Upton of Michigan, about introducing legislation to reform the FCC, specifically by reducing its authority to conduct merger reviews.

Upton, meanwhile, is uncommitted on reforming the Telecommunications Act, his aide Mike Waldron said, planning at first merely to identify "where technologies and legislation are out of sync."

Markey would like to see "a greater, more vigilant enforcement of the Telecom Act," Crowell said, and the congressman might introduce legislation or request hearings to try and prompt such action.

Senate commerce communications subcommittee chairman Conrad Burns of Montana "still feels one portion of the Act is not being enforced by the FCC," said his telecommunications aide Ben O'Connoll. That portion requires the FCC to eliminate unnecessary rules that can interfere with the spread of advanced services, such as broadband or future offerings, particularly to rural areas.

If any legislation gets passed in this Congress "it will be a surgical fix" rather than a "frontal assault" on the Act, predicted National Cable TV Association (NCTA) Vice President David Beckwith. A major rewrite "historically can take several Congresses," he said, noting the Telecommunications Act itself was about five years in the making.

NCTA "is very reluctant to open the Act," said Beckwith. "Once you open the Act you never know what will happen."



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (10333)2/7/2001 3:54:51 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12823
 
FCC's Michael Powell will let ILECs loose. It will not force them into fulfill check lists before allowing them into long distance.
The result:
1) Will be a severe drop in the ADSL roll out that the ILECs were -painfully and costly- doing to fulfill the regulations now dropped.

2) CLECs will disappear before Autumn.

3) Suppliers of ADSL will be closing down by the week.

4) El Matador was seeing the writing in the wall since September 30th when he started the ADSL IS DEAD Thread

FCC pushes for deregulation
By Peter Spiegel in Washington
Published: February 6 2001 19:55GMT | Last Updated: February 6 2001 21:37GMT

Michael Powell, the new chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, signalled a sharp break from his Democratic predecessors on Tuesday, pledging to roll back telecommunication regulation in almost all areas of the agency's responsibilities.

Mr Powell's drive would have the most immediate impact on the framework of the landmark 1996 telecoms deregulation act, which critics charge has failed to meet its primary goal: unleashing competition in local telephone services.

In his first public comments since assuming the post two weeks ago, Mr Powell defended the law, arguing it had helped spur large investments in broadband technologies. But he indicated he believed the FCC had moved too slowly to allow local telephone monopolies - known as the Baby Bells - from freely competing in all telecom markets.

"I do not believe deregulation is a dessert you serve after people have fed on their vegetables," Mr Powell said in a wide-ranging, hour-long discussion. "Deregulation is what promotes competition. A deregulated environment is what [encourages] new entry."

Easing restrictions on the heavily-regulated Bells would be a significant policy shift. Mr Powell's predecessors, under requirements laid out by the 1996 act, kept strong restraints on the companies until they completed a long checklist to fully open their local networks to competition.

In the four years since the act was passed, the Bells have been completely deregulated in only four states.

Consumer advocates have argued that any easing of regulatory incentives could wipe out new, competitive start-ups, many of which are having difficulty raising capital in the tech-adverse US markets.

But Mr Powell appeared undisturbed by the possibility, predicting that at least a handful of "Bell look-alikes" would be left to compete after the shake out.

"A lot of people show up at gold rushes, but not everyone goes home with the gold," he said. "That's just the brutality of the market."

Mr Powell indicated he would take his deregulatory bent into other areas, including wireless services, where large providers are fighting for the lifting of caps on the amount of spectrum they can own, and TV ownership rules, which prevent any company from owning stations covering more than 35 per cent of the country.

Mr Powell, son of secretary of state Colin Powell, said his liberalisation push would lead to a smaller FCC and announced a sweeping restructuring of the agency that could lead to the elimination or consolidation of several bureaux.