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To: Jim Mulis who wrote (554)4/9/1998 2:53:00 PM
From: Anthony Wong  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 663
 
Experts Predict Cable Will Dominate In U.S.
(04/08/98; 7:50 p.m. EST)
By Mo Krochmal, TechWeb

Within six years, the cable television industry will be a
winner in the bandwidth battle, said speakers at a
New York conference Wednesday.

Bandwidth has been one of the key concerns of
industries that are profiting from the explosive growth
of the Internet.

"After talking about it for several years, we are now in
the deployment and rollout phase," said Larry
Gerbrandt, a senior analyst with Paul Kagan
Associates, a Silicon Valley research firm.

At the "High Speed Data to the TV & PC"
conference, representatives from the cable industry
met with computer manufacturers such as Sun and
others like Bay Networks, content providers, and
telephone and cable supply companies to look at the
future of connectivity to the home.

According to Kagan Associates' projections, by the
end of 1998, cable modems will be installed in a
million homes in the U.S., while the telephone
companies will have installed their high bandwidth
connection technology, digital subscriber lines, into
100,000 homes.

By 2006, Kagan predicts there will be 39 million
homes with cable data connections and another 25
million with asymmetrical digital subscriber line
(ADSL) connections. Cable data connections, which
cost about $40 a month, should get less expensive
while phone companies will have to find a way to
reduce $200 or more monthly charges for digital
subscriber lines.

All that data, and where will it go?

"The computer will continue to do computing, but the
information hearth, where everyone sits around one
place, will change," said Avram Miller, vice president
for business development for Intel. "The model is
broken, people will not want interactivity in just one
place. We will want to interact with information
wherever we want in our house."

While cable will dominate in the United States, Miller
said, that is not the case globally.

Worldwide, "Satellites will be important because most
people in the world are not connected to any wires,"
he said.

Miller added, "ADSL is a great technology, but maybe
it is in the hands of the wrong industry."

techweb.com