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To: Larry Tomblin who wrote (506)11/14/1997 8:13:00 PM
From: Jay M. Harris  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 674
 
Larry, try not to waist your time figuring out stock moves and keep your eyes peeled with me on the business. After all, we are the owners, not the short term fund manager worried about next month. By the way, your kids are probably young and are not interested in DLGC stock at this age. What difference does the value really mean this month anyway?

The following equipment supplier uses DLGC gateways in their internet telephony chasis....

Ericsson Wakes Up And Smells The Internet
(11/13/97; 2:45 p.m. EST)
By Jeff Caruso, InternetWeek

<Picture>Ericsson, in an effort to help develop products for wireless Internet access, opened on Wednsday a testbed for projects by Ericsson and other companies called CyberLab.

Product ideas will be funneled to Ericsson's 20 other divisions, though company officials said they are still figuring out how that process will work. CyberLab, in Menlo Park, Calif., will also be a base for communicating with key partners and developers of Internet-based products.

"We will have a number of smaller, independent initiatives under the Ericsson umbrella," said Staffan Lindholm, general manager of Internet services at Ericsson, in San Francisco. "They may not be well-coordinated, but at least we will be able to move quickly."

Among the initiatives under way are an access router for ADSL<Picture> and IP telephony products, he said.

The company is also developing equipment to connect wireless networks directly to the Internet, instead of going through the traditional phone networks as they do today. In such a network, voice becomes secondary, company officials said.

Ericsson's wireless plans met with some skepticism. "Ericsson is betting a lot on access to the Internet via wireless," said Ray Jodoin, senior analyst at In-Stat. "It's still unclear how much that will happen." <Picture: TW>

Regards,

Jay