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


To: djane who wrote (51585)8/4/1998 4:55:00 PM
From: Mark Duper  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 61433
 
How about ASND rises because of it's merits and fundamentals. How bout ASND goes up because of the company's strategic vision and growth potential. Unbelievable. Wasn't LU down today?



To: djane who wrote (51585)8/4/1998 5:55:00 PM
From: Pat Hughes  Respond to of 61433
 
<Mark Thiele, vice president with First
Investment Advisors, an investment arm of First Union. >

To think this guy gets paid for his wisdom!



To: djane who wrote (51585)8/5/1998 1:34:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 61433
 
IBD. Nortel's Chief Says Bay Buy Widens Its Net [No ASND reference]

investors.com

Date: 8/5/98
Author: Michele Hostetler

Northern Telecom Ltd. has widened its net
to nab more customers.

The Canadian maker of telecommunications
gear is riding the convergence of voice
networks (generally wide-area networks)
and data networks (generally local-area
networks). Companies want to buy all of
their networking equipment from one firm.

Nortel is working to be that firm. In June, it
revealed plans to buy Bay Networks Inc. in
a $7 billion stock swap. The merger is
expected to close next month.

Nortel's second-quarter revenue rose 12%
to $4.16 billion. Profit from continuing
operations rose 33% to $356 million, or 68
cents a share.

Nortel Chief Executive John Roth recently
spoke with IBD about how Bay Networks
will change his company.

IBD:

How will Nortel change after it buys Bay?

Roth:

We've been in the wide-area-networking
business for a few years. When we came up
against the competition, while we'd win the
technical evaluation, the customer would turn
to us and say, ''That's really nice. You have a
good wide-area-network product. Now
what do I do for routers and the rest of the
LAN (local-area network)?''

We'd say, ''We don't do that stuff. You have
to go and talk to (a LAN company).''

(Our competitor) would say, ''We have this
wide-area-networking product and LAN
products, too. Why don't we just sell you a
bundle, end to end, all tidy?''

We'd end up losing a lot of potential
business. Even though we had been selected
(for the WAN piece), during the process of
the customer going out and getting the rest of
what he needed, we'd end up being taken
out of play.

Likewise, Bay found themselves in similar
situations. Bay has all the LAN gear, but
didn't have the wide- area-networking
products.

IBD:

How does the Bay purchase play into
voice-data network convergence?

Roth:

I think the voice and data convergence is
something we need to pay a lot of attention
to. We also need to watch that we don't get
carried away with a technology agenda. The
way I look at it right now is that Nortel -
once we acquire Bay - will be in a
phenomenal position because we will have
routing, circuit, fiber-optic and wireless
technologies. Voice over IP (Internet
protocol, for moving information on the
Internet) is really lucrative as long as
long-distance rates are high (for conventional
phone calls).

The voice bits travel at eight times the price
of a data bit. In a transoceanic call, that
premium is even higher. Voice over IP for
international calling is an area where people
can do what I call ''rate arbitrage'' - buy the
capacity as if it were data, then put voice
over it and have the voice travel at data
rates, which would save you a ton of money.
If the voice quality is a little bit worse than
what you're used to, you're . . . getting this
for less than 10% of what it would cost for a
voice call.

However, if you're looking in North
America, long-distance rates (for regular
phone calls) are coming down so fast that
people look at it and think: How much am I
really saving? Will I mess up the image I have
with my customers in terms of being a quality
company (because Internet voice quality
lags)?

I think the jury is out in my mind about how
fast voice over IP will really grow. It still has
technical issues.

IBD:

When will the quality problems of Internet
calls be solved?

Roth:

We're going to start solving them with the
transoceanic calls first. That reduction in
price is really profound. I think that's the
early market. Then the technology will
improve from there.

We put voice over our networks starting
about four years ago. It took us about 18
months to make voice over ATM
(asynchronous transfer mode, a common
data networking technology) transparent to
the user. It probably will take that long to do
the same with voice over IP. But ATM is a
technology designed from the outset to put
voice, video and data over it. IP was never
designed from this perspective . . . so we
have bigger issues to work out. I figure it's
going to take the industry 15 months to
resolve those issues. It might take longer.

IBD:

What do your customers want from the
Internet?

Roth:

This concept of having a highly reliable
network that you can put commerce onto
(and) that you can build your intranet
(internal, Internet-based network) with and
connect your sales force, your customers,
your marketing organization and order entry.
That is what everyone's asking for.

I was with Microsoft the other night. We
were talking about the availability of
Microsoft's (e- mail program) Exchange. I
said, ''How many nines in your availability?''
(How reliable is the system?) They said,
''We're up to 99.92 (out of 100).'' I said,
''Nortel will run 99.92 on a bad week. We'll
hit 99.97 on a better week.''

With 99.92, it means a company the size of
Nortel could have a couple thousand people
out of commission at any given point in time.

If we asked that question six to eight months
ago, people would say, ''Why are you asking
that? Availability of the e-mail system isn't
that important.''

The electronic-mail system has gone from
something that was faster than the regular
mail to now if it goes down, the CIO gets
fired.

(C) Copyright 1998 Investors Business
Daily, Inc.
Metadata: NT BAY MSFT I/4890 I/3574 I/3270
E/IBD E/SN1 E/TECH