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To: Mr. Nice Guy who wrote (10659)6/3/1998 9:29:00 AM
From: Pakman2000  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50264
 
Whoop-Ass..........Ready and waiting commander!



To: Mr. Nice Guy who wrote (10659)6/3/1998 9:31:00 AM
From: Secret_Agent_Man  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50264
 
Now here this, now here this, the final boarding calls for this ship are being initiated..those that dont have tickets have very little time to get on this flight before, it leaves this galaxy thru the next jump gate...

rocketeer1



To: Mr. Nice Guy who wrote (10659)6/3/1998 9:39:00 AM
From: Dolfan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50264
 
Good morning Rocketeers.

This is an interesting article I found on the Lucent thread regarding Sprint's big announcement yesterday regarding next generation Telecommunications.

THREAD --- INTERESTING ---PUTS A DIFFERENT SPIN ON IT
---Technology News

Analysts Sour On Sprint Network Plans
06/02/98; 8:24 p.m. ET)
By Mo Krochmal, TechWeb
Technology analysts are unsure whether Sprint can pull off the
ambitious network plans it unveiled in New York Tuesday, and some
went so far as to accuse the telecommunications company of
promoting services it may not be able to offer.
Sprint rolled out its Integrated On-Demand Network strategy, a plan
implemented in partnership with Cisco and Bellcore to provide
"virtually unlimited bandwidth" over single telephone lines. The
strategy lets users sit down at a communications buffet and gobble up
buckets of bits using data, voice, and video over existing copper lines.

The plan depends on Sprint being able to buy capacity on the local
data networks that many of the regional Bell operating companies
(RBOCs) are planning to build.

Calling it an "integrated on-demand network," Sprint plans to sell it as one-wire-does-it-all, using one network connection for multiple phone lines, access to the Internet, and advanced data services. The offering will be made to large businesses later this year, general business clients later next year, and residential consumers in late 1999.

The announcement was made at a Broadway theater, with a cast of
actors acting out scenarios in a multimedia presentation.
"This is smoke and mirrors, covering up a bad earnings
announcement," said David Goodtree, director of telecom strategies
for Forrester Research, a Cambridge, Mass., research company.
"They were not creditable. They threw in every networking buzzword
in a grand concept of fuzziness. There is nothing there."

Goodtree said he could not see what magic bullet Sprint had that other
telcos like AT&T, MCI, Bell Atlantic, Quest, and Williams did not.

Those companies are critical for Sprint to make its strategy work, said Abhi Chaki, technology analyst for Jupiter Communications, a New
York-based research company. Sprint can offer services to large
customers via the broadband metropolitan networks, bypassing local
carriers, but to reach the broad consumer and small office/ home
office market, the telcos are critical.

"Sprint will have to negotiate deals with the RBOCs to reach small
offices and homes," said Chaki.

Chaki said he was impressed with Sprint's technology, letting users
dynamically allocate bandwidth.

"But great technology doesn't win market share," he said. "AT&T and
MCI are not going to roll over and die."

The winners in this deal, Chaki said, are Cisco, which suddenly gets
credibility in the telecommunications market; Bellcore, which finds an
identity; and businesses, which will gain bargaining power as other
telecommunications providers jump into the marketplace.

Sprint is taking a tremendous risk, said Elliot Becker of San Diego, a
senior telecommunications analyst with BusinessTech.com.

"They are going to have to execute agreements with the local exchange
carriers and then get customers to fork out $200 for a meter so that
they can be billed on bits, rather than phone calls," he said. Getting
large numbers of people to go for a new technology, which often looks
appealing on paper, is a monumental task in the real world."