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To: Jeff Fox who wrote (58778)6/25/1998 3:59:00 PM
From: Tony Viola  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Jeff, RE: "the wife..."<<---

Not so PC either.

But, I agree that Paul did keep gender out of it.

Tony



To: Jeff Fox who wrote (58778)6/25/1998 5:40:00 PM
From: stak  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
Jeff et al, This moves up the deployment timetable for high bandwidth into the home to the end of 1999. This opens up tremendous potential for Intel's "constant computer". Any comments on where Intel might take this?

TCI deal may speed PC-TV marriage By Jim Davis
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM June 24, 1998, 1:55 p.m. PT
news analysis
The proposed $48 billion merger between AT&T and Tele-Communications
Incorporated is expected to help speed the convergence of PCs and TVs by
increasing the size and speed of the infrastructure investment needed to
transform analog technology into digital format.

If approved by regulatory agencies, the merger will create a new unit called
AT&T Consumer Services. Its mission will be to "significantly accelerate"
the upgrading of TCI's cable infrastructure
, which will be used to provide
digital phone, data, video services to consumers by the end of 1999,
the companies said.

LIVE stock quote Delayed 20 minutes AT&T
Corp. T60.0000-8.22% Tele-Communications-TCI
Group TCOMA40.5625+2.04% At Home Corp. ATHM51.7500+1.10% For
more details, go to NEWS.COM Investor. As a result, analysts say, consumers would
be more likely to see a timely deployment of computer-like digital TV set-top boxes,
partly because AT&T will assume $16 billion in debt from TCI.

"End users should be ecstatic today," said Daniel Briere, president of
Telechoice, a communications industry research firm.
"This moves up the deployment timetable for high bandwidth into the
home considerably."


That optimism was seconded by Cynthia Brumfield, an analyst with media
research firm Paul Kagan & Associates. "There is more cash freed up to put
into capital improvements, which certainly will extend to the whole digital
architecture," she said. TCI's tentacles@Home: Controls stake in high-speed
cable Net provider with Comcast and Cox.

TCI Music: Unit operates cable music provider Digital Music Express and online music
site SonicNet.

TV Guide: Acquired interest in print and online listings venue from News Corporation.

Local phones: Offers limited service in Hartford, Connecticut; Arlington Heights, Illinois;
and Fremont, California.

Other: Operates satellite company Primestar with other major cable operators. Pulled its
$125 million investment out of MSN.

The two important components in the rollout of digital services are the cable "head-end"
equipment at the main offices and the digital set-top box used by the consumer.

TCI and other cable companies are already hard at work on digital set-top boxes that
would offer features such as video-on-demand, email service, and Internet browsing
many times faster than today's dial-up modems.

The stumbling block hasn't been designing the consumer box, however, but the ability to
hook them up to a high-speed network. TCI has already spent half of an anticipated $1
billion on upgrading equipment at its central offices, so that these systems can
understand and receive data signals back from set-top boxes.

During a conference call this morning, TCI chief executive John Malone offered a
real-life example of the benefits of PC-TV convergence. "Would you like to order
Viagra while you're watching your favorite entertainment show? Push, point, and click."

The merger will probably fuel more consolidation among cable television and telephone
providers as PC-TV convergence gets closer to reality. That likelihood was reflected on
Wall Street, where today's announcement seemed to inspire confidence throughout the
cable industry. Some analysts like Merrill Lynch soured on the Baby
Bells--downgrading SBC Communications, Ameritech, and Bell Atlantic from "buy" to
"accumulate"--but upgraded Cablevision to "buy" from "accumulate."

TCI recently told analysts that it expects only 26 percent of its subscribers will be
served by plants capable of two-way communications at the end of 1998,
compared to
an industry average of 46 percent. But now, TCI is estimating it can reach its goal of 99
percent coverage by the end of 1999
--10 to 20 percent faster than anticipated,
according to Brumfield.

If all goes well, the result for consumers is that there could be broader deployment of
digital set-tops a shorter time frame.

"You should expect to see TCI move more quickly toward deploying services through
information appliances, [but] my fear is that AT&T will say, 'Let's stop and think about
what we're doing,'" cautioned Sean Kaldor, analyst with International Data Corporation.