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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Incorporated (QCOM) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: engineer who wrote (115892)3/22/2002 5:05:26 PM
From: pcstel  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 152472
 
but I will bet that it is a differnt frequency. Is it also called MMDS? that was an FCC nomenclature.

I believe that it operates on 3.5Ghz in Europe! In addition I don't really think that it was an FCC nomenclature.

PCSTEL



To: engineer who wrote (115892)3/22/2002 7:42:30 PM
From: limtex  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 152472
 
eng and thread - Bubblevision.

bubblevision.tv

What a great show. Not of course JUST because they quoted me the QCOM article<gg>

Best,

L



To: engineer who wrote (115892)3/22/2002 7:54:11 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
Off topic -- Postal Service Announces 3-Cent Rate Hike.

March 22, 2002

Postal Service Announces 3-Cent Rate Hike

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 4:49 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- From birthday cards to bank statements, charitable
appeals to newspapers and magazines, it'll cost more to send mail starting in
midsummer.

The increase -- including a 3-cent boost to 37 cents for first-class mail -- could
come as soon as June 30, giving the cash-strapped postal service a boost as it
tries to cope with declining business and hundreds of millions of dollars in costs
from the terror attacks last fall.

All that remains is for the Postal Service's governing board to set the date.

Postal Rate Commission Chairman George A. Omas announced approval of the
rate agreement, which was worked out by the post office and nearly 60
organizations and businesses. That agreement allowed the commission to avoid
the months of legal wrangling that usually accompany rate cases.

``I cannot overemphasize how extraordinary today's decision is,'' Omas said.

He said the increases would give the post office ``breathing room'' to deal with its
financial problems, ``an immediate influx of revenue while holding rate increases
to a reasonable percentage for postal customers.''

Commission member Danny Covington said the board realizes no one likes rate
increases but also recognizes that the terrorist attacks last fall have had a
profound impact on the nation and the Postal Service.

Robert F. Rider, chairman of the postal board of governors, said the board will
take up the increases at its April meeting.

The post office announced Sept. 11 -- just before the airliner attacks -- that it
was seeking new rates to take effect in the fall of this year because of falling
business in the slow economy. The agency had a loss of $1.68 billion last year
and anticipated one of $1.35 billion this year, despite freezing new construction
and cutting 12,000 jobs.

Then came the attacks in New York and Washington, followed by the
anthrax-by-mail contamination, slapping the agency with hundreds of millions of
dollars in costs for repairs, decontamination and health care.

Knowing that would plunge the post office into even worse financial problems,
Omas suggested the agency and mailers sit down and work out an agreement for
speedy consideration of the rate case -- an action that would cost mailers as
much as $1.5 billion because the increases would take effect months before
originally planned.

``I believe mailers cooperated in this effort because they felt that their short-term
financial sacrifice would help keep the nation's Postal Service strong. This
selfless attitude is a credit to the entire mailing industry.'' Omas said.

Many that normally oppose rate increases accepted this one, though not always
cheerfully.

One group of businesses commented that if the case had been fully argued, its
members would have fought for different rates.

``The settlement agreement represents, we believe, the best result that is possible
to achieve under current circumstances,'' said the group, which included the
Alliance of Nonprofit Mailers, AOL Time Warner, Coalition of Religious
Associations, Magazine Publishers of America and the National Newspaper
Association.

``However,'' the group added, ``the circumstances themselves -- the need for so
much additional revenue so soon after the last two rate increases, based on
estimates developed prior to Sept. 11, 2001 -- reflect poorly on the Postal
Service.''

The only opposition came from the American Postal Workers Union, which
represents workers who sort mail. The union argued that the rate increases
offered giant mailers discounts for presorting mail that exceed the amount the
Postal Service would save by not doing that work itself.

The post office denied that argument, saying it was ``based on speculation
regarding postal revenues, finances and capital investment plans.''

And organizations that would benefit from the discounts defended them. ``The
settlement rates are well within lawful limits,'' argued a group including the
Association for Postal Commerce, the Mailing and Fulfillment Service
Association and the Recording Industry Association of America.

^------

On the Net:

Postal Rate Commission: prc.gov

U.S. Postal Service: usps.com

Copyright 2002 The Associated Press