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To: Ed (IT Consultant) who wrote (9273)2/3/1998 10:58:00 PM
From: emichael  Respond to of 21342
 
Should be good for all ADSL stocks

State Lawmakers Tackle Bandwidth Bottleneck
(02/03/98; 7:38 p.m. EST)
By John Borland, Net Insider

As bandwidth becomes a mainstream issue, some
lawmakers are seeing the need -- and the opportunity
-- for using government regulatory powers to widen
the pipes.

"This is the first year that bandwidth has really come
into play in the legislative environment," said Bill
Myers, executive director of the Washington,
D.C.-based United States Internet Council, a group
that monitors Internet policies in state legislatures.

Leading the pack is California, where next week a
state senator will start hearings to determine if
policymakers can push telephone companies to
provide affordable high-speed Net connections.

"We're going to bring together the high-tech types with
the telco types," said Randy Chinn, a policy consultant
for state Senator Steve Peace (D-El Cajon), who
chairs the Senate Energy, Utilities, and
Communications Committee. "These two sides just
aren't talking to each other. We want to facilitate this."

Peace has introduced a bill outlining his broad policy
goals and stating that local telephone competition is
progressing too slowly. The bill as yet has no specific
policy recommendations -- Chinn said those will come
out of next week's hearings and others like them. But
the measure says the state should "encourage the
development and deployment of newer technologies
that provide high quality, high-speed digital
telecommunications services to all Californians."

"This may be something that the legislature can't affect,
other than to jawbone," Chinn said. "But if there is
something that can be done, we want to be prepared."

Some local communities and companies are far ahead
of state or federal efforts. The city council in Palo
Alto, Calif., recently proposed wiring every home in
that city with a high-speed Net connection.

In Phoenix, Ariz., U S West Communications has
rolled out ADSL lines, which can offer service up to
250 times faster than standard modems. The company
plans to offer the service in 40 Western cities by June
1998.

"You're going to see a lot of experiments over the next
few years," said Myers. Lawmakers in several other
states are looking at big-bandwidth campaigns, he
said, citing legislative interest in Colorado, Maryland,
and Virginia. "This educating effort really does need to
be played out around the country."

But even in California, opinion is split on whether the
government has any role to play in the race to boost
bandwidth. "We've been working with Internet folk to
figure out how state government can assist, but what
we're hearing on most fronts is that Internet policy
issues have to be dealt with on the federal level," said
Rand Martin, chief of staff for state Senator John
Vasconcellos (D-San Jose), who represents much of
Silicon Valley. "We want to be responsive to industry,
and we want to be responsive to people who use the
Internet, but trying to do that like we do with roads
and education is a difficult thing."

Vasconcellos has been working to start a state-level
Internet caucus, Martin said. But he and his peers
have been hamstrung by a lack of meaningful
state-level Net issues. "It's very hard for a state to set
Internet policy," Martin said. "We are so used to being
able to deal with issues like education or criminal
justice in concrete ways. Those who want to apply
that same process to the Internet are frustrated that it
doesn't work the same way."



To: Ed (IT Consultant) who wrote (9273)2/4/1998 8:29:00 AM
From: Skiawal  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 21342
 
'98 ~ West
March 9th ~ 12th, 1998 ~ Wyndham Hotel
San Jose, California - USA

Now a conference and exhibition devoted specifically and exclusively to DSL, as the telecom industry, in the words of one analyst, works to
"turn copper into gold".

DSLcon is designed to help in that quest, bringing together equipment
vendors, service providers and end-users/early adopters. In short,
DSLcon will address the technology and application options and
challenges necessary to bring this bandwidth enhancement to fruition....

dslcon.com