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Technology Stocks : Voice-on-the-net (VON), VoIP, Internet (IP) Telephony -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (1178)8/26/1998 9:15:00 AM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Respond to of 3178
 
SOUTHNET JOINS RACE TO BRING VOICE-OVER-IP TO MARKET

[All,

Another win for Ascend's MAX 4000/6000 gear
Another Dedicated IP Backbone
Another 5 to 8 cpm model at retail
Another Phone-to-Phone with PC-to-Phone to follow
Another Consortium approach to aggregating ISP and CLEC providers
Another dragon slayer that will give incumbents fits
Another 100 city nationwide rollout in record time (would you believe a month?)
Another goal of 250 cities over time
Another future plans for international service

Enjoy, Frank C.]

August 26, 1998

IP-based voice services could become a serious
competitor to ISDN-based voice services over the next
several years.

Another Internet service provider, SouthNet Telecomm
Services of Atlanta, is launching an IP-based voice
network. This comes on the heels of a similar
announcement by Internet Global Services of Dallas
earlier this month, and only weeks after Sprint [FON] of
Kansas City, Mo., and the AT&T/British Telecom
alliance announced they will develop voice- over-IP
services.

"We are going to deploy a voice-over-IP network
nationwide," says Gerald Escobar, sales and marketing
manager at SouthNet Telecomm Services. "We are
looking to have the service rolled out in 100 cities by
Sept. 30. A few cities are up now. Our long-term goal is
to have the service deployed in 250 U.S. and
international cities by the end of 1999."

However, SouthNet will need help if it is going to reach
its goal of 100 cities by Sept. 30. SouthNet only operates
nine points of presence itself. The company plans to
sign up Internet service providers and competitive local
exchange carriers (CLECs) to resell its service in areas
where it does not operate. SouthNet offers the
voice-over-IP service in Atlanta; Columbus, Ohio; New
York; Northern Virginia; Savannah, Ga.; and
Washington.

"We have less than five partners for the service right
now," Escobar says. "But we have just made the
announcement, so we have to give the service some
time. We are not just looking for domestic partners. We
are looking to partner with ISPs and telcos
internationally."

SouthNet could not reveal which companies it has
formed partnerships with because it has signed
non-disclosure agreements. This is a standard procedure
in contracts in which one company agrees to resell the
telecom services of another business.

"I think that even though SouthNet is a fairly small ISP,
the small guys can make voice-over-IP work," says
Michael Harris, president of Kinetic Strategies, a
consultancy based in Phoenix. "This offer will be of
great interest to other ISPs. The large carriers and
Internet service providers are going to create IP-based
voice services - the announcements of late have made
that clear. The small ISPs and CLECs will have to find a
way to offer IP-based voice if they want to compete.

"Whether SouthNet will be able to put the pen to paper
with these smaller ISPs and carriers, we will have to wait
and see," Harris adds. "But SouthNet has excellent
timing in developing the service. The market is headed in
this direction."

...Will The Long Distance Rates Be Competitive?

SouthNet believes it will be able to attract ISPs and
CLECs to its service because the price is right. The
company would not reveal specific pricing for the
service, but it says carriers and ISPs that resell
voice-over-IP will be able to offer domestic long distance
to the public for between 5 and 8 cents a minute. That
beats the pricing of many domestic long distance plans
offered by large long distance carriers to small
businesses and residences in the United States.

"If you are a big company, you can get [5 to 8 cents a
minute] on standard phone service by bundling long
distance minutes together," Escobar says. "Our service
is for mid-sized businesses and small businesses. They
often do not have large volumes of long distance
minutes, and can't get discounts on their long distance
costs from carriers. Some of our partners are selling the
service to residential customers as well."

"Five to 8 cents a minute should put a lot of ISPs in a
solid position to compete against the AT&Ts and MCIs
[MCIC] of the world," Harris says. "This seems like a
good target price for SouthNet too. It allows SouthNet to
still turn a profit on its service, while giving its
customers a price point they can do some damage with
in the market."

International long distance pricing is likely to be higher
than 5 to 8 cents a minute, but less than the international
long distance pricing of the large interexchange carriers
in the United States. SouthNet is still in the process of
forming parterships with ISPs and carriers outside of the
United States, so SouthNet would not predict what the
pricing for international long distance will look like.

...A Look At The Specs

The quality of IP-based voice services has been a
concern among ISPs and carriers in the past. When
packetized voice calls are transmitted over an IP network
with heavy traffic on it, their packets can be delayed.
This causes pauses in conversations, and can cause
popping or clicking noises on a call.

However, SouthNet is taking measures to eliminate the
possibility of delays occurring on its network. The
company is dedicating an IP backbone to voice traffic
alone, rather than including standard Internet traffic on
the backbone. SouthNet also is promising partners it will
upgrade the voice-over-IP backbone from T-1 lines with
frame relay running over them to T-3 service in network
segments where voice traffic becomes heavy.

SouthNet has chosen an Ascend Communications
[ASND] system to integrate voice onto its frame relay
network. The MultiVoice solution is available on Ascend
MAX switches. SouthNet has approximately 110 MAX
switches deployed in its frame relay network.

"We offer MultiVoice on the MAX 6000 and the MAX
4000," says Jose Garcia, senior product manager at
Ascend. "Our MAX 4000 Access Concentrator has slots
in the back for cards - you can put six cards in them.
There are three MultiVoice [digital signal processor]
cards available for the slots - a 16-port model, and
12-port model and an eight-port model. Each port can
handle one call at a time."

The software on the MAX 6000 can handle up to 48
simultaneous IP voice calls. The MAX 4000 also has six
slots for MultiVoice cards, but the software on the
switch only can maintain 16 simultaneous IP voice calls.

A software package called MultiVoice Access Manager
also is required in the MultiVoice solution. It creates a
gateway for voice- over-IP calls. The functions of the
gateway include authenticating user names and personal
identification numbers, translating phone numbers into
IP addresses and routing voice calls over an IP network.

The price for a MAX 4000 switch equipped with 48 ports
for voice-over-IP service runs $36,000. This includes the
switch, the MultiVoice DSP cards and the voice-over-IP
software for the switch.

SouthNet is using the Ascend voice-over-IP system to
offer phone-to-phone voice calls. Customers dial a
phone number to access an Ascend MAX switch, and
then dial a second phone number to reach their
destination. SouthNet plans to launch a PC-to-phone
voice service in January 1999. (Michael Harris, Kinetic
Strategies, 602/598- 9500; Jeff Lemay, SouthNet
Telecomm Services, 770/937-9550; Jennifer Reidy,
Ascend Communications, 510/747-2761.)

[Copyright 1998, Phillips Publishing]



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (1178)8/26/1998 9:22:00 AM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Respond to of 3178
 
[We're going mobile]

CALL IP SERVICE INTRODUCED BY RADIOMOBIL

August 26, 1998

CORPORATE IT UPDATE via NewsEdge Corporation :
International GSM provider Radiomobil has launched a
new long- distance call service which is routed over the
Internet. These Internet routed calls can be made from
ordinary GSM handsets by dialling two extra digits to
patch calls through a local ISP and to the Internet. The
service is said to be the first in the world to offer
non-computer based voice over IP services. The service
is offered at a cost of less than a third of the equivalent
fixed line operator SPT's charge. RadioMobil maintains it
is not violating SPT's legally- protected monopoly on
long distance and international voice telephony as its
service is packet-switched data transmission rather than
circuit switched voice telephony.




To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (1178)8/26/1998 9:25:00 AM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3178
 
[Via Neil of the Ascend Thread... Deutsche Telekom Piloting ASND's PC-to-Phone]

Wednesday August 26, 8:06 am Eastern Time

Company Press Release

Deutsche Telekom, Europe's Largest Telecommunications
Company, Announces New "PC-to-Phone" Pilot Project
Using Ascend's MultiVoice Voice-over-IP Platform

ALAMEDA, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 26, 1998--Ascend Communications,Inc. (NASDAQ:ASND - news), aleader in wide area networking (WAN) solutions for providers and users of the Public Network, announced today that Deutsche Telekom will launch a wide scale pilot Voice over IP (VoIP) telephony service this year, using Ascend Communications MultiVoice for the MAX platform.

The new pilot VoIP service will provide 1,000 T-Online subscribers (the online and Internet service of Deutsche Telekom) with the ability to make International calls using VOIP: subscribers simply dial via a multimedia-PC, which converts the call into IP-packets, and the call is automatically routed to the nearest Deutsche Telekom Point of Presence (PoP). The number dialed determines the way the packets are routed into the public network from the PoP.

At the given destination, e.g. New York, the Voice-over-IP-Gateway, equipped with Ascend's MAX 6000 WAN access switch, converts the IP packets back into voice and forwards the call to the public network. The receiver can simply pick up the call via a standard telephone.

The ''PC-to-Phone'' pilot project will offer VoIP connections from Germany to the following countries: Austria, France, Great Britain, Italy, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore as well as the USA and Canada.

''We expect positive synergy between our existing dial-in access platform, using Ascend's technology, and our PC-to-Phone-Project, as we can easily combine Ascend's MultiVoice platform for the new VoIP service with their proven access technology,'' said Wolfgang Schmitz, Senior Manager for Deutsche Telekom's Center for Internet and Data Network Platforms in Darmstadt, Germany.

''We are very pleased that Europe's largest carrier will be using our solution in their pilot VoIP service,'' said Roger Boyce, Vice President and General Manager of Ascend Communications Enterprise Access Division. ''Deutsche Telekom's new PC-to-Phone project is not only based on our powerful dial-in access equipment, but also on Ascend's expertise in the VoIP telephony sector.''

T-Online is the online and Internet service of Deutsche Telekom AG [NYSE:DT -news]. With a total of 2.3 million users it has become the biggest in Europe. In addition to traditional services like on-line banking, databases, on-line shopping and information systems, T-Online also offers comprehensive Internet services. Further information can be found on the World Wide Web at: t-online.de.



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (1178)8/26/1998 9:34:00 AM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3178
 
Dialogic and Excel Agree to Coordinate Development and
Support Initiatives; Agreement Centered on the Promotion

Of Open, Scalable Telco Solutions

[All, after the SUMA/CSCO takeout announcement, I'd keep an eye on XLSW]

August 26, 1998

BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE) via NewsEdge
Corporation -- An announcement was made today at
Excel's annual User Conference that Dialogic
Corporation (Nasdaq:DLGC), the world's leading
manufacturer of high performance computer telephony
(CT) components, and Excel Switching Corporation
(Nasdaq:XLSW), a leading provider of open switching
platforms for telecommunications networks worldwide,
have entered a joint integration and support initiative.
Under this initiative, Dialogic and Excel will integrate
Excel's new Compact PCI (cPCI) EXNET Connect fiber
backbone technology and distributed EXS call
processing software with the Dialogic line of DM3 based
voice, fax, IP Telephony, automatic speech recognition
(ASR) and text to speech (TTS) products. This offering
will be based upon a high-availability cPCI platform to
support the integrated solution.

Cooperation between Dialogic and Excel will allow the
companies' collective customer base to leverage future
technology developments based on standards-based
hardware and software components from both
companies.

EXNET Connect and DM3 Compatibility

Excel's new cPCI EXNET Connect technology opens
Excel's distributed switching system to cPCI platforms as
nodes on the EXNET fiber backbone of their Expandable
Switching System (EXS). Customers of Excel and
Dialogic can now include digital signal processing (DSP)
based media stream processing resources directly in a
cPCI switch node and eliminate the difficulty and
expense of externally connecting PCs to the switch via
T-1 connections. The cPCI node can be run under Unix
or Microsoft Windows NT operating systems. Dialogic
plans to integrate its CTMedia server middleware with
TAPI and S.100 interfaces on this platform in the future.

The Dialogic DM3 architecture provides 96 ports of DSP
processing in a single slot and is proven in applications
running up to 768 ports in a single server. By seamlessly
integrating Excel's distributed switch design with
standards-based cPCI CT components from Dialogic,
service providers and CT developers can build
cost-effective intelligent network (IN) and wireless
solutions for the global telecommunications market.

"We look forward to working with Excel to advance the
use of open standards, CT technology in large
telecommunications networks," said Howard Bubb,
president and CEO of Dialogic Corporation. "By
supporting integration with Excel's EXNET Connect
product and the Dialogic DM3(TM) media stream
processing architecture, our combined customer bases
will be able to develop extremely high performance
solutions to large telco-grade applications with reduced
time and cost."

"We are excited about the opportunity that a tighter
integration of each companies' strategy presents,"
stated Robert Madonna, Excel's president and CEO.
"This integration, which couples Excel's distributed call
processing software on EXNET Connect with Dialogic's
DM3 media processing architecture, eliminates the need
for a physical T-1 connection. This frees up the
associated switch matrix ports for greater network
connectivity."

About Dialogic Corporation

Dialogic Corporation is the leading manufacturer of
high-performance, standards-based CT components.
Dialogic products are used in voice, fax, data, voice
recognition, speech synthesis, call center management
and IP telephony applications in both the CPE and
public network environments. The company is
headquartered in Parsippany, New Jersey, with regional
headquarters in Tokyo, Brussels and Buenos Aires, and
sales offices worldwide. For more information, visit the
Dialogic Web site at dialogic.com.

About Excel Switching Corporation

Excel Switching Corporation is a leading provider of
open switching platforms for telecommunications
networks worldwide. Excel develops, manufactures,
markets and supports a family of open, programmable,
carrier-class switches that address the complex
enhanced services and wireless and wireline
infrastructure needs of network providers. The
company's products are currently deployed in
telecommunications networks in 60 countries
throughout the world. Excel has ISO 9001 certification
and BABT Full Quality Assurance Approval. For more
information, visit the Excel website at xl.com

This release may contain statements which are "forward
looking", subject to risks and uncertainties that could
cause actual results to differ significantly from
expectations. Factors that might cause such differences
include, but are not limited to, those relating to:
dependence on and concentration of relationships with
application developers, original equipment
manufacturers and systems integrators; length of sales
cycle; risk of new product introductions' highly
competitive market; compliance with evolving industry
standards; dependence on proprietary rights; and other
risks identified in the Company's Securities and
Exchange Commission Filings including those risks
identified in the section entitled "Risk Factors " of the
Company's Registration Statement on Form S-1 (File No.
333-35791) and Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the
quarter ended September 27, 1997.

Product and service names used within are trademarks,
registered trademarks and service marks of their
respective owners.

CONTACT: Dialogic Corporation | Jane Mazur,
973-933-3000 Ext.6118 | J.Mazur@dialogic.com | or | Excel
Switching Corporation | Mary Kindle, 508 862-3145 |
mkindle@xl.com