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Technology Stocks : Ascend Communications (ASND) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: djane who wrote (50643)7/29/1998 4:12:00 PM
From: Mysore Han  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 61433
 
My recollection says, SRA was a fault-tolerant mini computers company
providing continuous availability for mission critical applications at the places like airline reservation system, stock-exchanges, telcos..

I guess they have some kind of line interface card on their mini computer which connects to SS7 n/w. Ofcourse it is expensive fault-tolerant machine which telcos love their 99.xxxx availability claim....

I don't think LU manufactures mini computers...do they ???



To: djane who wrote (50643)7/29/1998 4:46:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 61433
 
More on PSINet VoIP offering. ASND quotes. Works on LU PBXs

soundingboardmag.com

PSINet Unveils VoIP Strategy

By Paula Bernier

It appears that Internet protocol (IP) telephony is
finally starting to catch on with the Internet service
provider set.

PSINet Inc. (www.psinet.com) announced this
week a trio of IP telephony services--under the
name PSIVoice--for the intranet, extranet and
consumer markets. The services will run over IP
connections on PSINet's frame relay backbone and
will be based on equipment from Ascend
Communications Inc. (www.ascend.com).


With 39,000 corporate customers in 36 countries,
it's not surprising that PSINet's IP telephony efforts
are focused primarily at corporate multinationals.
iPEnterprise enables businesses with private branch
exchanges (PBXs) to use PSINet's frame relay/IP
network for carrier-grade voice services between
their locations. The service is targeted at distributed
corporations with offices overseas.

iPEnterprise Plus enables corporations to reach
select destinations--such as business partners,
customers or suppliers--outside their intranets via
low-cost IP telephony links. The extranet service will
allow for simplified dialing codes and other enhanced
features such as desktop faxing, conference calling
and unified messaging services.

Customers, who will be charged on flat per-site
basis (PSINet says the exact fee will vary based on
the customer) rather than a per-minute charge, can
expect to save 20 percent to 50 percent over what it
would otherwise cost them for their voice
communications, says PSINet's chief technology
officer Chuck Davin.

"[It will be] tiered based on the number of
simultaneous voices that are supported," says Davin.

As part of the two corporation services, PSINet will
install an IP telephony-enabled Ascend MAX2000
(supporting a single T1, or 1.5 megabits per second
link) or MAX6000 (supporting four T1s) at the
customer premises. The devices will act as dedicated
IP telephony gateways (not as general data access
devices).

The Ascend products work with most popular
PBXs, such as those from Lucent Technologies Inc.
(www.lucent.com) and Northern Telecom Inc.
(www.nortel.com), says Roger Boyce, Ascend vice
president and general manager. Service and
provisioning capabilities may vary depending upon
the flexibility of the PBX, he adds.

iPGlobal, meanwhile, is targeted at the consumer
market, although PSINet plans to sell it largely as a
wholesale service to other carriers that want to sell it
to consumers. The consumer product will be based
on Ascend's TNT, DS-3-level product.


IPEnterprise is available now to any PSINet existing
customer. IPEnterprise Plus is scheduled to be
available later this year. IPGlobal is expected to
make its debut early next year, with the deployment
of gateways for that service largely depending upon
where PSINet sees demand (the company has not
yet struck gateway interconnection agreements with
other carriers or settlements providers).

So why did it take so long for PSINet to get into IP
telephony?

Unlike some of the next-generation telcos that have
come out with IP telephony services over the past
several months, PSINet is focused on the business
market, so it waited to come out with its services
until it could ensure high-quality connections, says
Davin.

"We're on a different market focus," he says. "Many
early voice over IP focused on consumers, we're
focused on the corporate customer base. And with
[these customers] quality is a cardinal issue."

Davin says the quality of its IP telephony connections
will be "nearly imperceptible" from voice conversions
on the public switched network or via dedicated
voice lines. Compression will vary depending on
customer requirements, he says, adding the Ascend
products support all popular IP telephony
compression schemes.


Copyright c 1998 by Virgo Publishing, Inc.
Please read our legal page before using this site.



To: djane who wrote (50643)7/29/1998 6:24:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 61433
 
Internet Millions more set to take the step into cyberspace

scmp.com

ASSOCIATED PRESS, Tuesday July 28 1998
Here is the latest estimate on the size of
cyberspace, according to Internet pioneer Vinton
Cerf, who last week delivered the keynote speech
at the annual global meeting of the Internet Society:

At least 100 million people use the Internet.
There will be between 300 million and one
billion users by December 2000. "I don't
believe the billion number," Mr Cerf said. "I
don't think we'll have enough computers for
all those people, but I can easily believe [300
million]."

45 million computers can "log on", still a
small number compared with the world's
telephone system of 828 million connections.

240 of 250 countries have an Internet
service, ranging from a per capita low in
countries like the mainland, where the
Internet is "vigorous and growing", to
Finland, with the highest per capita
penetration.

There are three million "domain name"
addresses, many of which are based on
company trade marks.

About 75 per cent of Internet use is for the
World-Wide Web.

There are 1.5 million Web sites with 350
million pages, and a great deal of "dark
information" that searchers cannot see, such
as large databases that are not in the
standard HTML format.

The Internet is growing at 100 per cent a
year, compared with 5-10 per cent a year
for the telephone system.

There are 7,500 Internet service providers,
4,500 of them in the United States alone.

Back To Top

Copyright c1998 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd.
All Rights Reserved.



To: djane who wrote (50643)7/29/1998 6:28:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 61433
 
ISPs, Java spur growth in Internet/intranet market

By Cheri Paquet
InfoWorld Electric

Posted at 7:53 AM PT, Jul 29, 1998

Internet services, Java, and enterprise applications are fueling the Internet and intranet market, which is expected to grow to $562 billion by 2002, a U.K research firm said Tuesday.

Internet- and intranet-related expenditures totaled about $80 billion in 1997, according to market research company Input. Of the $562 billion projected for 2002, about $300 billion will be in software and services.

"This information illustrates the growing reach of the Internet/intranet markets and emphasizes the increasing importance of Web technology in myriad business and consumer applications," said John Willmott, director of research at Input.

Last year, North America accounted for 70 percent of the worldwide Internet/intranet market, Europe for 18 percent, Asia Pacific for 11 percent, and the rest of the world for one percent, according to Input. Those figures will shift by 2002, with North America taking 59 percent of the market share, Europe 21 percent, Asia Pacific 18 percent, and the rest of the world two percent, Input estimated.

Currently, the five largest Internet/intranet markets are the United States, Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom, and France, said Input spokeswoman Katherine Chalmers.

"The U.S. is responsible for a large percentage of the Internet and intranets markets, and that will continue. However, we are seeing rapid growth outside the U.S., with other countries growing at a faster rate, Chalmers" said. "The Internet is becoming ubiquitous."

Companies are investing in database and commerce applications, as well as Internet-based virtual private network (VPN) services, Input said in its report, "Internet and Intranet Market Forecast Worldwide 1997-2002." They also are investing in applications that allow them to integrate their electronic data interchange and VPN networks into their Internet/intranet infrastructure to link company branches, mobile workers, suppliers, and customers, the study said.

Enterprise applications will continue to be integrated with the intranet environment over the next five years as intranet use grows, Input said. In the United States and in Europe, 50 percent of large organizations have an intranet, compared with 15 percent in 1996.
Intranet-based knowledge management applications will be one of the fastest growing applications segments over the next five years.

In the application software and development tools market, Java is having a strong impact, Input said. The number of developers using Java, currently about 400,000, is growing at a higher rate than the number of developers using C++ or Visual Basics. Almost all of the
development tools in use today will feature Java support within two years, Input predicted.

The research firm's market forecasts are based on ongoing data collection and analysis conducted by Input analysts who follow the industry throughout the year, said Input's Chalmers.

Located in Berkshire, England, and Mountain View, Calif., Input is at
input.com.

Cheri Paquet is a San Francisco correspondent for the IDG News Service, an
InfoWorld affiliate.

Go to the Week's Top News Stories

Please direct your comments to InfoWorld Deputy News Editor, Carolyn April

Copyright c 1998 InfoWorld Media Group Inc.

InfoWorld Electric is a member of IDG.net



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To: djane who wrote (50643)7/29/1998 6:30:00 PM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 61433
 
V.90: As Fast as It's Going to Get

Modem vendors reject a proposed standard that
would have boosted the upload speed of V.90
modems.

by Brian McWilliams, PC World Daily News Radio
July 28, 1998, 3:46 p.m. PT

A proposal to boost the upload speeds of V.90
modems has died, apparently due to poor modem
sales and the indifference of manufacturers.

Current V.90 modems are limited to 33.6-kbps
upstream speeds. But Lucent has developed a way to enable nearly symmetrical data rates, with upload speeds approaching 45 kbps.

More than a year ago, Lucent proposed that its
technology become part of the International
Telecommunications V.90 standard, which will be
ratified in September. But according to Les Brown, a
Motorola engineer and rapporteur for the ITU study
group on 56-kbps modems, Lucent's proposal never
made it into the spec, and the company hasn't pushed
to have it added to the second revision of the V.90
spec, to be released next year.

On Thursday this week, the ITU's 56K study group will
meet in Quebec City to finalize the V.90 spec before it
goes to the vote in September. Lucent spokesperson
Charlie Hartley said the company still thinks the
technology is promising, but Lucent won't bring a
formal proposal to the meeting.

Analysts say that since most modem users are Web
surfers, the industry doesn't see the 33-percent
upstream speed increase Lucent offers as worth the
trouble. Many modem companies are now turning their
attention to building DSL products rather than
enhancing their analog modems. Lucent says it has no
plans currently to develop the technology as a
proprietary standard.

Tune in to PC World News Radio to hear today's news
broadcast via RealAudio.

Copyright c 1998 PC World Communications. All Rights Reserved. Use of this service is subject to
the PC World Online Terms of Service Agreement.



To: djane who wrote (50643)7/29/1998 6:38:00 PM
From: Sonny  Respond to of 61433
 
off-topic SRA (Stratus): From mid-July, it was showing signs of heavy accumulation. Plus, lot of insiders were buying too. I aggree, this looks much better than AFCI story ... it was precisely because of the recent AFCI rumor, SRA took the intra-day breather today around 25.5, while big-boys confirmed its validity; once they were relieved, they went after it big time- it looks like from the strong close, imho.

regards to all,
-/Sonny.