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To: djane who wrote (51285)8/3/1998 4:02:00 AM
From: djane  Respond to of 61433
 
Bertelsmann Sees Internet Sales Explosion

Friday July 31 2:52 PM EDT

GUETERSLOH, Germany (Reuters) - Internet commerce is set to explode in Germany with
sales likely to surge to $22.60 billion Bertelsmann's multimedia director said today.

Klaus Eierhoff, head of multimedia at the German media giant, wrote in a guest column for
Reuters Advertising and Media Briefing that while about six million Germans are using the Internet
today, the number is growing "exponentially."


"In the coming years, (Internet sales) will grow to about 40 billion D-marks, equivalent to five
percent of German retail revenues or the entire volume of the present mail-order business,"
Eierhoff wrote.

The Internet stands to revolutionize the automotive industry in particular, by offering consumers
what the conventional car dealer often cannot, from virtually unlimited selection to comparisons
between makes, he wrote.

He cited the success the U.S. market had already seen in online car sales, with $1 billion in annual
turnover, as a sign of what Germany could expect.

Eierhoff hailed multimedia's ability to make use of the trend towards one-to-one marketing, in
which customers can have their questions and concerns addressed directly via the Internet or call
centers.

But Germany threatened to hinder the development of the Internet if it continued to hold online
service providers responsible for all content which appeared on their services, he wrote.

A German court in May sentenced the former head of the German unit of online service
CompuServe, Felix Somm, to a two- year suspended sentence for "abusing" the Internet and
allowing child pornography to be accessible via CompuServe.

Copyright c 1998 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is
expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or
delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.



To: djane who wrote (51285)8/3/1998 4:13:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 61433
 
Telephone Suppliers See Bounty in Brazil After Sale

totaltele.com

By Christian Plumb at Bloomberg News

31-JUL-98

Telephone-equipment makers such as Ericsson AB,
Nokia Oyj, and Lucent Technologies Inc. are likely to be among the first to benefit from Brazil's $19 billion sale
this week of its telephone network.

While telephone companies such as Spain's Telefonica
SA paid two-thirds more than the government's asking
price, <b?they'll have to spend another $52 billion in the next
seven years to build and expand phone networks.

That means big business for the world's
telephone-equipment suppliers.

"This market is going to explode," said Verner Dittmar,
general director of telecommunications at Siemens AG's
Brazil unit.

The results of the auction could be a boon to Ericsson.

"The Europeans got a lot of (Telebras)," said David
Wheeler, an analyst with Bear Stearns & Co. in Sao
Paulo. "Those are all big clients of Ericsson." Telefonica,
Telecom Italia and Portugal Telecom SA were the
biggest bidders in the auction.

Though increasing competition from the likes of Northern
Telecom Ltd. could shrink Ericsson's market share in the
area of cellular phones, the increase in investment will
end up benefiting the company, he said.

Smaller companies could benefit too.

Miami-based Mastec Inc., which makes infrastructure for
telecommunications and has a joint venture with one of
the Brazilian

"Total telecom capex in Brazil could potentially double
within a one-year time frame from $6 billion per year to
$12 billion per year," said Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
analyst Chris Gutek.


"Mastec's joint venture is well positioned to get some of
this pending flood of construction spending." Mastec has
been best-known for its ties to its former chairman, the
late Jorge Mas Canosa, who was the leading anti-Castro
activist in the US. His son, Jorge Mas Santos, is the
company's president and chief executive officer.
Mastec's Brazilian joint venture partner Inepar SA was
part of the bidding group that acquired control of the huge
Telebras unit spanning from the beaches of Rio de
Janeiro to the rain forests of the Amazon.

The Telebras auction winners have so far given mixed
signals on their intentions on who will get their equipment
contracts. Telefonica said the same day as the Telebras
auction that it planned to use France's Alcatel SA, the
world's No. 4 telecommunications equipment maker as
its wireless equipment provider worldwide. It's unclear
who Telefonica will use to upgrade conventional phone
networks.


Telefonica bought parts of three wireless networks,
including a piece of the biggest, in Sao Paulo. Portugal
Telecom director Luis Avelar said the company's main
goal in upgrading the cellular network for Sao Paulo
state, which it acquired for $3.1 billion, will be to cut
down on the number of providers the state-controlled
Telesp Celular SA used.

"Nec will be well placed, but I cannot tell you how we will
pursue it in the future," he said.

Canada's Telesystem International Wireless Inc., which
bought control of two cellular companies, will decide
suppliers based on competitive bidding, said its
spokesman. In the past in Brazil, the company has used
Canada's Northern Telecom, but it's used a variety of
suppliers in the rest of the world.

Manufacturers of telephones and related equipment
expect sales to surge about 30% next year to about 13
billion reais, or almost double sales in 1997. The industry
also is likely to generate about 100,000 new jobs in the
next decade. Equipment makers already are scrambling
for financing and talking with the companies that bid for
Telebras, said Roberto Isnar, vice president of Abinee, an
association of electrical and telecommunications
equipment makers.

The growth should continue to fuel an already
fast-growing industry.

Over the past five years, the telecommunications
industry has grown faster than Brazil's economy.
Between 1991 and 1996, the industry grew an average
14% a year, while the economy growth averaged 2.9%.

With only 11 telephones for every 100 inhabitants, the
nation's telephone system has always hampered
companies and elevated costs. For example, companies
still pay more than 1,000 reais to buy a telephone line in
Sao Paulo, Brazil's industrial heartland.

c Total Telecom 1998. All Rights Reserved. info@totaltele.com

Paris Data Limited, a
UK-based consultancy
and software
development
organisation, offer
good practices for
defining telecoms
service level
agreements.

Telecom Italia Mobile
Names Libonati as
New Chairman

AT&T Stops Ciena
WDM Tests

Hermes Provides
Carrier 1 with Interim
Network

Telephone Suppliers
See Bounty in Brazil
After Sale




To: djane who wrote (51285)8/3/1998 4:33:00 AM
From: djane  Respond to of 61433
 
LA Times. Bandwidth It's Called, and It Means Change [No ASND reference. The masses discover bandwidth...]

latimes.com

By JAMES FLANIGAN, Sunday, August 2, 1998

If the landmark 1967 film "The Graduate" were remade today, the
word of advice young Benjamin Braddock, played by Dustin
Hoffman, would receive would be "bandwidth," not "plastics."
Bandwidth is the technical term for the capacity of communications
channels. Fiber-optic lines have far more capacity than old-fashioned
copper telephone wires; cable can deliver more channels of television than
old-fashioned broadcast networks--although all that is about to change.
The news is that communications capacity is about to become, in effect,
infinite. With the coming of digital television, the broadcast networks are
gaining the ability to deliver five to 10 times the channel capacity they now
have, which means they will be able to handle Internet traffic. Cable systems
everywhere are being upgraded to carry two-way voice, data and video on
the Internet. And new electronic processors are enabling traditional
telephone lines to offer broad-band capability for the Internet.
The race to own such bandwidth is behind the deals you've seen
recently. Last week Paul Allen, the billionaire co-founder of Microsoft,
invested $4.6 billion to acquire cable company Charter
Communications(), just three months after he entered the cable field
by purchasing Marcus Cable of Dallas.
Allen's deal mirrors AT&T's agreement last month to acquire
Tele-Communications, a leading cable firm.
* * *
Television networks--ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, Warner Bros. and
Paramount--are wondering how best to exploit the bandwidth they have
gained along with frequencies for digital channels. Analysts suggest the
networks should seek partnerships with telecommunications companies that
know how to bill customers for data services.
What it all adds up to is an explosion of bandwidth in the coming years,
with profound implications for business in the decades ahead. Henry
Nicholas, chairman of Broadcom, an Irvine-based developer of microchips
that enable telephone and cable lines to connect to the Internet, says this
technological shift is "comparable to mainframe computers giving way to the
Intel- and Microsoft-powered desktop personal computers in the early
'80s."
The ultimate potential of increased bandwidth is that "it will bring Internet
access to 100% of U.S. households, as today they have access to
television," says Geoffrey Yang, a partner in the venture capital firm
Institutional Venture Partners() of Menlo Park, Calif. Currently,
about 18% of U.S. households have Internet access, although 45% have
computers.
But this is not a signal for individuals to run out and buy Internet stocks
or for businesses to acquire Internet companies.
It's too soon to pick winners or even to predict the direction of the
business. If the spread of bandwidth and the Internet were an athletic
contest, we'd be in the pregame show.
However, some implications for business and investors can be discerned,
mainly because they're extensions of current trends.
Greater bandwidth will remove constraints on videoconferencing and
allow people to truly collaborate in work, says Nicholas, "because the
gestures, facial expressions and tones of voice will be captured much more
clearly by improved video pictures."
The growing trend of companies using Internet connections to buy from
suppliers and sell to other businesses will increase greatly, reducing
inventories and needs for warehousing and office space.
Broadcast television traffic, even with increased bandwidth, will still be
largely one-way, Yang says. But there will be masses of it--stock prices,
news and business information and sports scores that can be personalized.
"Users might select Web sites of particular interest that would be
automatically stored" on their computer systems, Yang says.
Greater bandwidth could bring personalized television. "You'll swipe a
card through your set-top box and the programming and commercials will
be suited to your tastes. Each family member will have a personalized
program," predicts Stephen McKenna, entertainment and media sales
director for Sun Microsystems().
* * *
Advertising may well become seamless. One will see an object on a TV
show and click onto a parallel channel for price information and purchase
capability. McKenna of Sun, which develops computer languages allowing
machines to communicate, sees the home being transformed within 18
months to two years. But most analysts see home markets emerging in seven
years or more.
The impact of greater bandwidth will be felt much sooner by business.
Computer-based networks for business are already sizable. Qwest
Communications International(), a Denver-based provider
of such services, has grown to more than $700 million in revenue, with
operations in 48 states, in just two years.
As bandwidth availability expands, Yang sees the Internet's packet
networks displacing traditional telephone networks--even for voice traffic.
"Internet telephone calls are now one-tenth the cost of traditional phone calls
and soon will be one-hundredth the cost," he points out.

Such dramatic cost changes always accompany basic shifts in
technology, with effects that are unpredictable--even for people close to the
action. At a meeting of roughly 800 new-media entrepreneurs of the oddly
named LAwNMoweR Group at Paramount Studios the other night,
attendees expressed fears that opportunities for small companies to sell on
the Internet would be limited once "the Web site of WalMart.com"--as one
put it--came on the scene. Yet it's more likely that the new environment will
spur entirely different innovations.
So the effects of technology are unpredictable, but lest we fear that the
world is spinning at random, we should reflect that the idea underlying
bandwidth originated 54 years ago in the war effort. The great
mathematician Claude Shannon made the discovery that communications
frequencies could expand to hold more information--he called it "wave
division multiplexing." He may never have foreseen the spread of bandwidth
and Internet commerce.
The Internet itself originated from the Arpanet, which was developed
under a Defense Department contract in the early 1970s. The Pentagon
wanted a decentralized communication system that would be less vulnerable
to nuclear attack than centralized systems.
What it got was the decentralized communication phenomenon that, with
the almost infinite capabilities emerging now, will transform the business of
the world.
Remember the word: bandwidth.
* * *
James Flanigan can be reached by e-mail at jim.flanigan@latimes.com.

Copyright 1998 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved