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To: ENOTS who wrote (23855)6/1/1998 12:26:00 PM
From: Chicago  Respond to of 36349
 
To All:

From today's LA Times Business Section...

Pacific Bell's new high-speed Internet service will probably be
available in Los Angeles and surrounding areas in July or
August, but business customers won't have to wait that long.
Beginning today, NorthPoint Communications Inc. of Irvine will
make similar high-speed network access available in the San
Fernando Valley and in Los Angeles, Orange and San Bernardino
counties through five Internet service providers.
The Internet companies include Epoch Internet and Verio
Southern California (both based in Irvine), Concentric Network of
San Francisco, and Flashcom and Internet Express (both based in
Los Angeles). They will offer the service to small and medium-size
businesses.
In March, NorthPoint began offering high-speed access to
Internet service providers in the Bay Area and Silicon Valley.
The company sells variations of digital subscriber line, or DSL,
services, which can provide "always-on" Internet access over
standard copper lines at speeds up to 50 times that available
through most dial-up 28.8-kilobit-per-second modems. Users can
surf the Internet and talk or send faxes on the same phone line at the
same time.
Epoch said it will offer business customers a variety of DSL
services and speeds ranging from 144kbps to 1.5 megabits per
second, with prices starting at $35 per month per user, plus monthly
carrier fees of $99 or more.
In addition, Santa Clara-based Covad Communications Co.
said it will expand its DSL service into the Los Angeles market by
the fall. The company began offering the high-speed access lines in
the Bay Area late last year.
According to Dhruv Khanna, general counsel at Covad, the new
rivals will be able to buy access to PacBell's lines and sell the DSL
service under their own names, much as long-distance resellers buy
network space from MCI or AT&T and sell it under other brands.
"This should accelerate the opening up of the DSL market,
because they cannot refuse competitors access to the services that
they are selling themselves," Khanna said.

Best Regards,
Chicago

P.S. GO BULLS!!!