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To: Glenn Norman who wrote (30183)1/13/1998 1:48:00 PM
From: Gary Korn  Respond to of 61433
 
Glenn,

You were right. NT data didn't include the split. I filed a corrected 1997 performance chart on ASND news. I asked the webmistress to delete the original chart. I hope she does.

Thanks,

Gary Korn



To: Glenn Norman who wrote (30183)1/14/1998 12:28:00 AM
From: blankmind  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 61433
 
interesting article i ran across and can not remember if you posted it with you cpq theory:

Compaq greases the DSL skids
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Tim Greene

10/13:/97
If Compaq Computer Corp. has its way, the world soon could be
connecting to the Internet at 20 times today's speeds.
The computer powerhouse is looking to put digital subscriber line
(DSL) access technology inside its PCs, a move that could mean the
replacement of today's modems with a truly high-speed alternative.
Compaq could help usher in a new Internet era, one where Webmasters
could fill sites with the audio and video that chokes current modem
technology.
Much in the same way that PCs sold with modems and online services
have helped create the mass of Internet users, bundling DSL with desktops
could create a huge community with speedy access, enough to justify richer
site development.

Compaq says it will team with another vendor to provide a DSL broad that
would let PC users connect to network backbones at higher speeds than they
can now. The fastest form of DSL support data transfer at 7M bit/sec
upstream and 1M bit/sec downstream. The technology could be cheaper than
other broadband services because it uses existing copper phone lines.
The company recognizes it cannot solve Internet delays with customer
modems alone, so it also is looking at ways to speed up Web response times,
according to Alan Lutz, senior vice president and general manager of
Compaq's communications products group.
In addition, Compaq later this year will enter the Gigabit Ethernet
wars with an OEM version of Extreme Networks, Inc.'s Summit Gigabit
Ethernet device called the Netelligent Gigabit Ethernet switch. At
Networld-Interop 97 last week, Compaq showed the Netelligent box, but did
not confirm the OEM relationship.
The DSL and Gigabit Ethernet initiatives are part of Compaq's scheme
to become a network powerhouse. The company is looking at the DSL market to
complement its purchase earlier this year of Microcom, Inc. Microcom gave
Compaq the remote dial-up access concentrators and Microsoft Windows NT
Server remote access support that now ship in Compaq servers.
Compaq's venture into Gigabit Ethernet expands its LAN offerings that
already include 10M/100M bit/sec Ethernet switches, as well as PCs and
servers. Compaq's agreement with Intel to codevelop chips and software
drivers for Gigabit Ethernet should give Compaq a three- to six-month jump
on the market once the new chips now in development are completed, said
Alan Lutz, senior vice president and general manager of Compaq's
Communication Products Group.
'This is a frontal assault strategy,' Lutz said.
Compaq's DSL move could be significant for that market, said one
analyst. Corporate users buying PCs for workers who telecommute could
purchase DSL-ready desktops in large enough numbers to prod services from
carriers, said Beth Gage, senior broadband consultant for TeleChoice, Inc.,
a telecommunications management consulting firm in Verona, N.J.
'If a very large corporation with campuses around the country decided
to use ADSL for remote access, perhaps that would be a way to push
different service providers,' Gage said.
With a guaranteed sizeable demand for corporate DSL lines, a carrier
could gracefully ease into offering the service, she said.
Selling DSL-capable PCs also would relieve carriers of one of their
biggest potential headaches: installing the necessary DSL gear. Most
current carrier business models for DSL call for the carrier to install and
own the customer gear.
The groundwork for a relationship between Compaq and NetSpeed is
already there. NetSpeed President John McHale, was president of NetWorth,
Inc., which Compaq bought in 1995.
Synergy is also important because NetSpeed already has a formal
exclusive relationship with Northern Telecom, Inc. (Nortel) under which
Nortel sells NetSpeed gear to carrier networks.
So if you combine Nortel's clout with carriers and Compaq's corporate
and consumer sales reach, you wind up with a team that actually could
accellerate the growth of the budding DSL market, Gage said.