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Technology Stocks : PairGain Technologies -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stockbug who wrote (24125)6/3/1998 4:18:00 PM
From: porcupine --''''>  Respond to of 36349
 
Thus, to Sprint --!!!!:>

[Remember, it's copper wire that most office desktops are already plugged into.]

news.com

Fast modem does double duty
By Jim Davis
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
June 3, 1998, 12:00 p.m. PT

Rockwell announced a new chipset that
combines high-speed DSL (digital
subscriber line) and dial-up modem
capabilities while enabling dual usage, the
first product to result from a recent
partnership with DSL equipment maker PairGain
Technologies.

Rockwell said modems with the new
chipset will allow consumers to make
voice or fax calls while they are
simultaneously connected to the Internet
or other networks. The dial-up modem
could even be used in conjunction with the
DSL modem, possibly allowing a user to
hook up to different service providers at
the same time.

Perhaps more important, Rockwell said
the chipset will support the upcoming
standard for DSL "lite" modems as well as
a variety of faster DSL connection
standards. DSL lite modems will reduce
the cost and hassle of DSL service by
eliminating the need for a telephone
company to install a piece of equipment
called the "splitter."

Modems with the Rockwell chipset would
have maximum downstream transmission
rates as high as 1 mbps and upstream
speeds of 128 kbps over standard copper
phone lines, and could be continuously
connected to a network. The dial-up
modem included in Rockwell's chipset can
operate at a maximum rate of about 53
kbps.

Currently, typical
DSL services are
considered to be too
expensive for mass
deployment to
consumers, but with
the advent of DSL lite
modems, the market
for DSL chipsets is
expected to grow
rapidly as more Internet users and
businesses clamor for multi-megabit access
speeds. PC vendors such as Dell already
have plans to make DSL modems an
option on some systems by the end of the
year, using chipsets from other companies.

Analysts say a tentative international
standard for DSL lite modems could be
reached as early as October 1998. A
standard is an important milestone, since
customers will be able to purchase
products from a wide array of vendors that
can communicate with each other, thus
ensuring competitive prices and ideally a
bigger overall market.

Rockwell expects to have sample chipsets
available by fall, but in the meantime
limited prototypes will be shipping to some
equipment makers. Volume production is slated
for the first quarter of 1999 at a price of
$67.50 in 10,000 unit volumes.

Rockwell licensed some of the basic
technology used in the new chipsets from
PairGain in a deal announced in March.