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To: bob zagorin who wrote (681)12/9/1997 2:07:00 PM
From: Maverick  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1629
 
3Com sees standards for 56K modems

SANTA CLARA, Calif., Dec 5 (Reuters) - 3Com Corp said
Friday that the International Telecommunications Union has
agreed on a compromise that will likely result in a standard
for 56K modems in January.
3Com said in a statement the agreement was reached at a
meeting of the ITU this week in Orlando. It should clear the
way for standards for the new high speed modems.
An official determination will be made at a meeting from
January 26 to February 6 in Geneva, Switzerland. Once a
standard is determined, the ratification will be set in
September 1998.
3Com and Rockwell International Corp developed
competing and non-compataible technologies for 56K modems. The
two camps have so far failed to reach an accord on standards
for the modems, which transmit data at about the twice the
speed of older modems. Because of the lack of standards, many
consumers have put off upgrading to the newer models.
((Los Angeles Newsdesk 213-380-2014))



To: bob zagorin who wrote (681)12/9/1997 5:34:00 PM
From: Maverick  Respond to of 1629
 
3Com And Cabletron Plot Recovery Plans
(12/05/97; 1:00 p.m. EST)
By Jeff Caruso, InternetWeek

3Com and Cabletron will move forward quickly to get back on
track after both companies this week warned of disappointing
quarterly financial results.

3Com, which like Cabletron disclosed that revenue and earnings
would fall far short of expectations, quickly disclosed plans to
address inventory problems in its reseller channel that played
into the poor results.

Santa Clara, Calif.-based 3Com said during the next few
quarters it will implement an EDI system to monitor inventory
levels.

Chief executive officer Eric Benhamou said in a prepared
statement the company's hit is just a one-time correction. In
addition, 3Com said sales were hurt by weakness in the Asian
market and the lack of a set standard in 56-kilobit-per-second
modems.

The inventories that U.S. Robotics maintained before its merger
with 3Com earlier this year seem to have been "worse than we
originally thought," said Noel Lindsay, director at Deutsche
Morgan Grenfell Technology Group, adding that resellers may not
have been giving 3Com reliable information about their
inventories. High inventories can skew sales figures, since
resellers will not order more products until they sell what they
have in stock, he said.

Companies are tempted to sell their products into the channel,
building up inventories, to make their own sales appear greater,
said William Becklean, senior vice president at Tucker Anthony.

3Com's disclosure coincided with Cabletron's revelation that it
will also have lower-than-expected revenues for the quarter.

Despite the gloomy financial news, Cabletron, in Rochester,
N.H., is readying products that could help turn the tide.



To: bob zagorin who wrote (681)12/9/1997 5:38:00 PM
From: Maverick  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1629
 
service provider infrastructure is where the growth is
Cabletron next week will continue trying to reshape itself into a
lower-end equipment supplier by announcing
10/100-megabit-per-second Ethernet switch modules for its
products. These include a 26-port module for the MMAC-Plus,
which is being renamed the SmartSwitch 9000 to match the rest
of its product line. The module sells for $16,995.

Cabletron also is unveiling a 16-port version for the SmartSwitch
6000 that will ship next month for $8,995.

Although Cabletron faces its own obstacles -- including a new
CEO and the recent acquisition of Digital Equipment's
networking operations -- both 3Com and Cabletron are
competing against Cisco, which is finding success at their
expense by selling turnkey networking systems.

They're also not targeting the service provider infrastructure as
much as San Jose, Calif-based Cisco, and that's where the
growth will be, said Roxane Googin, an independent analyst in
Jackson, Wyo.

"I think it's interesting that the bidding war for MCI is happening
at the same time that these companies are having problems," she
said

Mav's note: CSCC is gaining market share against STRM (Stratacom) in the infrastructure arena with OC-12/48 GX550, multiservice CBX500. The OC-3 BSTDX should help ASND gain even more market share in ISP and telco.