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To: Moonray who wrote (15230)5/5/1998 3:25:00 PM
From: Jeff Sheeran  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22053
 
Lucent Technologies Introduces Modem Chip Set that
Enables Both 56-Kbps and ADSL Data Transmission

biz.yahoo.com

Did anyone here see this?
What do you think?

Jeff



To: Moonray who wrote (15230)5/5/1998 4:08:00 PM
From: David Lawrence  Respond to of 22053
 
NEW YORK, May 5 (Reuters) - AT&T Corp Chairman C. Michael
Armstrong on Tuesday joined other long distance carriers in
calling for a restructuring of the 'Baby Bell' companies' local
networks, and a cut in fees they pay to local phone companies.
AT&T wants the Baby Bells separated into wholesale
businesses that complete calls for other carriers, and into
retail businesses that sell services to end users.
AT&T's proposal follows similar plans outlined by other
long distance companies including LCI International Inc (NYSE:LCI)
and MCI Communications Corp (NASDAQ:MCIC).
Under the 1996 Telecommunications Act, the Baby Bells must
open their local telephone market to competition before
entering the long distance market.
The Federal Communications Commission has rejected all four
Baby Bell long distance applications saying the companies had
not yet done enough to open local markets.
The call by AT&T and its long distance counterparts to
split the Baby Bells' wholesale and retail businesses are
beyond the measures outlined by the Telecom Act. But AT&T, MCI
and LCI said the extra steps may be needed to ensure fairness
as Baby Bells try to enter the long distance market.
AT&T also said the fees long distance companies pay the
local phone companies to complete long distance calls are at
least eight to 10 times more than their actual costs.
The long distance companies pay a fee to the Baby Bells in
order to have a long distance calls transmitted over a local
telephone network into a customer's home. AT&T contends these
fees are too high and serve as a subsidy for the Baby Bells.
"Separating the Bell companies' local networks from their
other operations will ensure that the Bell companies can't
subsidize their competitive activities from the inflated fees
they charge long distance companies to have calls completed,"
Armstrong said.
Splitting the Baby Bells would further fragment the
companies created by the break-up of Ma Bell in 1984, when AT&T
was split from the regional Bells.