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To: Stoctrash who wrote (27024)12/22/1997 2:30:00 PM
From: John Rieman  Respond to of 50808
 
Flexible design............................................

mediacentral.com

TCI-GI Place 15M Unit Box Order

Mega-deal includes TW, Cox, Comcast, C'Vision

By Jim Barthold and K.C. Neel

The cable industry will usher in 1998 a lot like it greeted 1993: giddy about digital TV's prospects and optimistic about mass technology deployments after nine MSOs led by Tele-Communications Inc. agreed Dec. 17 to buy up to 15 million OpenCable digital set-tops from General Instrument Corp.

TCI and its affiliated companies ordered up to 11.9 million of the $300-per-unit digital set-tops that will be delivered over the next three to five years.

What's more, Time Warner Cable announced that it will order 500,000 units, while Cox Communications Inc., Comcast Cable Corp., Cablevision Systems Corp., Canada's Shaw Communications Inc. and TCI's Headend In The Sky affiliates will cover the rest of the 15-million-box order.

Noticeably absent: MediaOne, which a company spokesman said last week is "in discussions" with GI.

As part of the deal, GI will surrender a 16% stake in the company by giving the nine MSOs warrants to purchase equity at about $15 per share. The warrants will vest as the set-top orders are shipped over the next three years.

"This is the old programming model; we'll trade you carriage for equity, which is incredible," remarked one industry source.

GI also sold another 10% of the company to TCI in exchange for HITS' digital transport and authorization functions. TCI chairman-CEO John Malone estimated that TCI and its affiliate companies will get 10% of the overall 16% stake in GI, thanks to its box orders. In all, Malone said TCI will receive about $600 million in GI stock.

Malone's moves prompted financial analysts to wonder what's next for TCI. Some speculation centered on AT&T buying into the MSO, which would give TCI more muscle to upgrade its plant before the new OpenCable boxes arrive.

Some 58% of TCI customers live in systems that have been upgraded to a hybrid fiber-coax architecture, Malone said, but few have two-way capability. Upgrading those systems to two-way plant will take two years, he added, while upgrading the rest will take three.

One analyst who requested anonymity last week said he expects AT&T, which has reportedly been talking to TCI for some time, to buy into @Home, the MSO-backed, Internet-access service provider. And some sources said last week that AT&T is ready to buy Teleport Communications Group, in which TCI is a major investor.

But other industry observers said TCI doesn't need another partner, given its rising stock price and the large amount of debt financing it can tap after shoring up its balance sheet this year.

Although several MSOs were part of last week's set-top deal, industrywide enthusiasm was tepid.

"This is nothing more than just a HITS order," said one MSO who requested anonymity. "It involves all the operators that have agreed to carry HITS, even if it's only in a few systems. The MSOs win because they get the warrants and get a box at the low price. But they don't have to order very many of them to get those benefits."

Other major MSOs said they're taking a wait-and-see attitude.

Dallas-based Marcus Cable, which counts about 1.2 million customers, is a Scientific-Atlanta Inc. digital customer.

"We made the choice to roll out S-A's digital boxes in our major markets," said COO Lou Borrelli. "It's product that's available today and that we can deploy in the first half of 1998. We don't have to wait."

While Time Warner ordered 500,000 units, it said it's still committed to its Pegasus order with S-A. "Digital boxes we view as something that takes us further than just broadcast delivery," said Time Warner CTO Jim Chiddix. "The DCT-5000 is a box that's aimed at that market."

He continued: "There's an agreement about making a capital investment in digital boxes. There's a long line that leads to interactive services to be a success. That only works if there are open standards, and the industry has come a long way with open standards."

Last week's box deal capped a difficult year for GI, which ousted chairman Richard Friedland, laid off thousands of workers and made plans to change its name back to General Instrument from Next Level Systems Inc. next year.

"It's a nice feeling that 16% of our company is owned by the customer base," said Ed Breen, GI's newly named chairman-CEO. "Clearly, we have coalesced a significant portion of the North American industry to get behind a massive digital deployment."

He pegged the value of last week's order at about $4.5 billion by using a $300 average price point for each digital box. He said GI bid four models: the low-end DCT-1000 and DCT-1200, which are currently being shipped; the DCT-2000; and the high-end DCT-5000. Breen added that box prices have dropped about $150 over the last 18 months.

News of the deal helped boost GI's stock $2.69 ¥ or 18% ¥ to $17.69 a share Dec. 17. On the flip side, several MSO stock prices dipped a bit. TCI's stock fell 13 cents to $27.69 Dec. 17; Comcast's shares dropped 50 cents to $31.06; Cox's stock fell 25 cents to $38.75; and Time Warner's shares sank 6 cents to $60.13.

"GI had to do something," said one industry observer. "They came out of the Western Show with little to offer. By giving away some of the company, they boost their stock and ensure the deployment of their technology. Let's face it: Just about everyone has some GI product in their systems, so it behooves the industry to have a strong GI, not a weak one."

Some industry observers said the GI box deal looked a lot like 1987's MSO rescue of Turner Broadcasting System Inc. But they added that last week's announcement could very well help the entire cable industry. "This deal puts 15 million boxes in the field at a reasonable $300-a-box price," said Tom Eagan, a PaineWebber Inc. analyst, who added that he liked the fact that a family of boxes ¥ rather than just one set-top ¥ will be deployed to meet customers' needs.

And although the new deal is reminiscent of Malone's infamous 500-channel promise of 1992, his latest declaration is based on realistic goals, one analyst said.

"The difference between now and 1992 is that then the industry promised something it couldn't deliver, it was on the verge of major reregulation and didn't have the cash flow to make it happen," said Fred Moran of Furman Selz Inc. "This time, the cash flow exists and the technology exists. The [cable] industry is already deploying digital boxes, and I think [Congress'] current [reregulation] threat is a farce."

All the new digital boxes will comply with CableLabs' OpenCable initiative, although not all of the set-tops will be the richly featured units that eventually will receive OpenCable certification, according to Don Dulchinos, the director of business development at CableLabs and the OpenCable project manager.

"By the time they take delivery of these orders, we expect the spec to be in place and be able to certify against the spec," he said, noting that the agreements carry a clause calling for OpenCable compliance.

Added Mark Coblitz, the VP-strategic planning at Comcast: "These boxes can be ordered today, but [they are] not something you can get delivered immediately."

One set-top vendor who requested anonymity said he was confused by a purchase announcement that came only two days after TCI's deadline for a request for information on OpenCable boxes.

Although S-A wasn't included in last week's TCI-GI deal, executives there said they aren't out of the running.

"We submitted our RFI response on Dec. 15 and we've been asked to come out and meet with them on Dec. 22," said Allen Ecker, S-A's CTO. "I don't think they have given all their requirements to GI. That's our understanding, that this is only a portion that they have committed to GI. Otherwise, why would they ask us to come in Monday in response to the proposal we made this past Monday?"

Pace Micro Technology PLC was the other big winner last week, thanks to its licensing of the GI technology. "We put ourselves in a position where we are fundamentally the main second source for TCI," said senior VP Michael Tucker. "We have been talking to TCI for quite some time."

Malone's rollout schedule for the next three years: "We'll continue with our current deployment of what I consider the Model T version [DCT-1000] throughout 1998. In '99, we'll start mass deployment as fast as we can get the boxes of this Cadillac [DCT-2000 or 5000] version. As our plant upgrade rolls forward across the nation, we would ubiquitously deploy these boxes in my economic model, and that would open up to service providers a long list of services that this platform would be able to [handle]."

(December 22, 1997)



To: Stoctrash who wrote (27024)12/22/1997 4:46:00 PM
From: DiViT  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50808
 
"he also explained that the initial 10-million-device order could include boxes that house a DVD player or Sony PlayStation."

How about Sega?

biz.yahoo.com



To: Stoctrash who wrote (27024)12/22/1997 4:56:00 PM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
Silicon Valley Courts Cable TV

By PETER H. LEWIS

Several of the nation's largest cable television companies announced plans last week to
buy 15 million digital set-top boxes from NextLevel Systems Inc., a move that could
sharply accelerate the use of new digital services by TV viewers.

But the agreement between NextLevel and the cable operators o led by the largest of
them, Tele-Communications Inc. o also served as the starting gun for a race by Silicon
Valley companies to move beyond the world of personal computers into the far larger
television business. The computer industry wants to provide the processors and
operating systems for all these new digital boxes, and the cable industry appears to be
a receptive customer.

"Silicon Valley will now play a critical role in the development of what we used to call
the cable industry," predicted Gerald M. Levin, chairman of Time Warner Inc., which
owns the nation's second-largest cable system.

Leo J. Hindery Jr., the president of Tele-Communications, said the industry had now
set a course that would intersect rapidly with Silicon Valley. "The era of promising has
passed," he said. "The world of the future is the world of the network PC."

Although final technical specifications have not yet been issued, the digital TV set-top
devices will actually be powerful computers. Unlike the conventional analog boxes in
use today, these new devices will be able to process high-speed digital signals moving
to and from the home.

They will enable cable companies to expand the number of channels they offer. And
they will also make possible new generations of television-based interactive services,
including high-speed Internet access with e-mail, on-demand pay-per-view videos,
push-button electronic commerce, advertising that can be aimed to specific homes,
interactive games and eventually high-definition video.

The speed of the deployment of these boxes depends in large part on the cable
companies' ability to upgrade their existing analog systems. That can be a slow and
expensive process. To raise money to pay for new cable and optical fiber networks
and millions of the expensive new boxes, the companies are actively wooing big
investors -- including computer and telephone companies.

In June, for example, the fourth-largest cable operator, Comcast, sold 11.5 percent of
the company to Microsoft Corp. for $1 billion. Microsoft has also spent an estimated
$1 billion this year in buying and developing WebTV, a system that uses a standard
telephone line instead of cable to provide Internet services on a television set.

Tele-Communications, short of cash, has been the focus of recent billion-dollar
investment rumors; press reports have identified Microsoft as a possible suitor. In fact,
John C. Malone, chairman of Tele-Communications, and his counterpart at Microsoft,
Bill Gates, have held several meetings this year.

Cable companies have completed installation of digital lines that could potentially serve
3.25 million current cable subscribers nationwide, said Cynthia Brumfield, a senior
cable television analyst for Paul Kagan Associates. But so far, only about 40,000 of
those customers have taken the digital television leap, she said. Still, the potential
market is huge.

Cable lines now pass more than 90 million American homes, and 65 million of those
subscribe to cable services. In contrast, residential penetration of personal computers
has stalled at fewer than 40 million homes, of which about 16 million subscribe to an
Internet server or other online services.

The opportunities for the Silicon Valley companies include not just a new market for
microprocessors and operating systems, but also for new applications, many not yet
imagined. But before any of these marketing dreams can reach fruition, cable
companies must persuade their customers to buy or lease the digital boxes o and to
pay higher fees for the new services.

The digital boxes available today are expensive; at a typical cost of $400 or $500, they
are above the threshold that most consumers are willing to pay. Most customers can
choose to lease them from the cable companies instead.

But cable companies are also reluctant to pay so much for the boxes, until they are
certain that their future income will offset the high initial cost of equipping homes for
digital services.

"On one hand, the cable companies have not placed orders for these boxes because
they cost too much, and on other side, the box makers want to lower the cost but
didn't have a big enough order," said Bruce Leichtman, a media analyst with the
Yankee Group in Boston. Still, he added, the NextLevel announcement "breaks the
logjam."

NextLevel says it plans to sell the next-generation boxes for about $300 each, meaning
the deal announced last week could be worth as much as $4.5 billion to the company
over the next three years. Tele-Communications, the largest customer, agreed to buy
10 million of the boxes but demanded concessions from the bidders that resulted in the
$300 price. Other customers include Time Warner, Comcast, Cox Communications
Inc. and Cablevision Systems Corp.

The new digital boxes require far more processing power than the conventional boxes
now in about 30 million homes. They will also need a robust operating system, and
Microsoft wants to establish Windows and its own WebTV Plus unit as the industry
standard.

A rival proposal has been offered by a joint venture of Netscape Communications
Corp. and Oracle Corp.

Under one outlook that Tele-Communications' Malone detailed last week, the cable
industry could possibly name both Microsoft and Network Computer Inc. (an
Oracle-Netscape joint venture) to supply system software for the new digital television
boxes, and cable operators would decide which of the two operating systems to use in
the boxes they lease to their customers.

In such a situation, analysts said, the choice would be simple for Comcast, or any
company partly owned by Microsoft.

About 30 other companies also want to set the standard, including IBM, Sun
Microsystems, Scientific-Atlanta, Toshiba, Cisco Systems, Thomson Consumer
Electronics, Sony, Lucent Technologies, Zenith Electronics, Texas Instruments and
Panasonic.

With stakes so high, companies in the computer, consumer electronics and cable
industries are in a flurry of negotiations over everything from technology to investments.
Intel Corp. recently invited cable company representatives to its California
headquarters to demonstrate prototype systems that are based on Intel's Pentium II
microprocessors.

In advance of the visit, Intel announced that it would no longer fight the use of
high-definition television standards favored by broadcasters and consumer electronics
companies.

Meanwhile, Microsoft says it is integrating a number of video-related features into its
Windows 98 operating system. But the cable industry is wary.

"We're not going to let one maker of hardware or software get into a position to
control this industry," warned Ted Turner, vice chairman of Time Warner.

After meeting with Gates earlier this year, Malone, the Tele-Communications chairman,
warned in September, "Beware Bill Gates."

But at the Western Cable Show earlier this month, Microsoft officials were meeting
with cable operators from Tele-Communications and other companies to demonstrate
their new Windows-based cable boxes. And Hindery said his boss' comment in
September had been misinterpreted.

"We said, beware closed environments," Hindery explained. "We can't have anything
that retards growth." Most of the cable companies covet Microsoft's money, but none
wants to see the software giant dominate their industry as it does PCs.

The comment prompted Barry Diller, chairman of HSN Inc., to snap back, "Beware
Bill Gates."

In presentations to cable industry executives last spring, Gates proposed a business
alliance that would have made Windows the standard operating system for
digital-television boxes -- and also would have given Microsoft a slice of the revenue
from all the new electronic commerce conducted over these cable networks. He was
rebuffed.

Cable executives said Microsoft had sweetened its offer in recent weeks, asking for a
smaller percentage of revenue. But the cable industry is still talking to other suitors.

</a> Related Sites

NextLevel Systems
nlvl.com

Tele-Communications
tcinc.com

Monday, December 22, 1997
Copyright 1997 The New York Times