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To: Steve Fancy who wrote (61)10/5/1998 1:16:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 3891
 
Alcatel Demonstrates New ADSL Service Offerings for Bell Atlantic

BusinessWire, Monday, October 05, 1998 at 10:46

DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 5, 1998--Alcatel announced that it
is exhibiting several new ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line)
applications today at a Bell Atlantic service demonstration at the
National Press Club in Washington, DC.
The event will showcase the first deployment of traditional
carrier equipment using integrated ADSL and will highlight Bell
Atlantic's Infospeed DSL service. The demonstration will include new
capabilities using Alcatel's Litespan(R) access systems.
In 1997, Bell Atlantic selected Alcatel's Access Division
(formerly part of DSC Communications Corporation) to provide
high-speed ADSL equipment for its network deployment plans.
At today's event, Bell Atlantic will use the Litespan access
platform to highlight the benefits and capabilities of integrated
ADSL.

-- Speed. Visitors will be able to compare the speed and performance
of a standard 28.8 kbps dial-up analog modem line versus Bell
Atlantic Infospeed DSL service using a high-speed multi-megabit
ADSL line. This demonstration will show how Bell Atlantic is
addressing its customers' needs for faster Internet access and
information delivery.

-- New Services. Bell Atlantic will also show the benefits of ADSL
lines running at various speeds. One of these lines will be used
to demonstrate the delivery of high-speed Internet services. This
application is just one example of how high-speed ADSL technology
will bring new services and quality levels to customers
throughout Bell Atlantic's network.

Mark Wegleitner, Bell Atlantic vice president - new services
technology, said: "We are using Alcatel's Litespan platform to launch
our commercial Infospeed DSL program. ADSL is a breakthrough
technology that allows us to capitalize on our embedded plant
investment while providing advanced broadband services. The Litespan
implementation of ADSL is key to expanding the reach of ADSL in our
network."
Mike Pisterzi, senior vice president of Alcatel's Access
Division, said: "Bell Atlantic continues to show its solid commitment
to delivering ADSL service to its customers at an accelerated pace. To
accomplish this, Bell Atlantic has drawn on the strength of its
embedded base of Litespan access systems, while installing additional
systems in its advanced telecommunications network. Litespan's
integrated ADSL provides the speed and flexibility needed to initiate
this ATM-based service simultaneously with narrowband services. We
look forward to supporting Bell Atlantic as it expands its ADSL
offerings further in 1999."
Alcatel's Litespan is a universal access platform based on SONET
(Synchronous Optical Network) technology. More than 10 million
Litespan lines have been deployed to date by service providers
nationwide. With its flexible architecture, Litespan provides a
cost-effective migration path for carriers as their service
requirements progress from basic voice applications on up to highly
advanced DSL-based broadband applications.
On Sept. 4, Alcatel completed its acquisition of DSC
Communications Corporation, a Dallas-based telecommunications systems
manufacturer. A leading provider of next generation digital loop
carrier (NGDLC) systems and ADSL capabilities, DSC originally
announced its ADSL deployment contract with Bell Atlantic in May 1997.
Bell Atlantic began deploying the company's ADSL equipment in June
1998.

A world leader in telecommunications systems and equipment, as
well as related cables and components activities, Alcatel operates in
over 130 countries. Alcatel provides complete solutions and services
to operators, service providers, enterprises and consumers, ranging
from backbone networks to user terminals. For more information, visit
Alcatel on Internet: alcatel.com or the US web site at
www.usa.alcatel.com.

Litespan is a registered trademark of Alcatel, formerly DSC
Communications Corporation.

(Note A) Former DSC contacts

CONTACT: Alcatel, Dallas
Terry Adams (Note A)
972/519-4358
or
Julie Williams (Note A)
972/519-3089
or
Amy Morenz
972/996-7896

KEYWORD: NEW YORK
INDUSTRY KEYWORD: COMPUTERS/ELECTRONICS TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMED
PRODUCT

Today's News On The Net - Business Wire's full file on the Internet
with Hyperlinks to your home page.
URL: businesswire.com

Copyright 1998, Business Wire



To: Steve Fancy who wrote (61)10/5/1998 1:19:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 3891
 
European Firms Aim To Cut U.S. Rivals' Lead In Telecom Equipment

Dow Jones Online News, Monday, October 05, 1998 at 10:46

By Kimberley A. Strassel, Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
LONDON -(Dow Jones)- Europe's Internet sites are beginning to reflect
local culture in content -- but when it comes to hardware, it remains
solidly American.
Europe has long been home to some of the largest players in the
telecommunications-equipment market, among them Siemens AG of Germany,
France's Alcatel SA (ALA) and Telefon AB L.M. Ericsson (ERICY) of
Sweden. But the lucrative market to supply the nuts and bolts that run
the Internet in Europe has been completely dominated by U.S. firms such
as Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO), 3Com Corp. (COMS), Ascend Communications
Inc. (ASND) and Bay Networks Inc.
Europe is fighting back. By developing partnerships, restructuring
their businesses and parlaying their longstanding relationship with
national carriers, European communications-equipment giants are
scrambling to obtain the advanced technology they need to compete in a
new data-driven world.
"This is becoming a very tough market, and the simple truth is that a
lot of technology is being generated out of the West Coast of the U.S.,"
said Chris Lewis, principal consultant at Yankee Group in the United
Kingdom. "The remaining bastions of European equipment companies are
going to have to reposition -- or form relationships -- or risk being
left behind."
Indeed, the market for new gear for data transmission and the
Internet is crucial for the future of Europe's equipment players. The
world's century-old phone networks are being made obsolete by the
Internet. The demand for voice-network equipment, something in which
companies such as Siemens and Ericsson have specialized, is being
superseded by the need for equipment such as hubs, routers and
high-speed cable that can handle large amounts of data. Analysts
estimate that by 2005, the volume of data traffic is expected to be 20
times the volume of voice calls.
The growth rate for Internet-equipment sales in Europe is set to
outpace that in the U.S. for the first time this year, and the total
European market for data-networking equipment is expected to top $13.6
billion this year, according to market-research firm Dataquest.
When Cisco first arrived in Europe in 1990, "we were the only people
that did this kind of work," said James Richardson, president of Cisco
Europe, Middle East and Africa. Companies such as Alcatel and Siemens
had fat contracts to supply traditional voice equipment to national
operators such as France Telecom SA and Deutsche Telekom AG, and the
Internet seemed a distant dream.
That gave U.S. firms an open playing field. The first targets were
corporations, which were looking for new ways to wire up far-flung
offices; the Internet seemed the most promising and inexpensive way to
do it. This "enterprise market" has become "the mainstay of our
operations," said Dave House, president of Northern Telecom Ltd., which
recently acquired Bay Networks. Ian Keene, an analyst at Dataquest, says
Cisco, 3Com and Bay Networks together hold 47% of Europe's corporate
market. U.S. companies also gained a foothold supplying the new --
albeit small -- divisions of national operators with equipment to run
Internet networks.
European rivals are racing to narrow the enormous gap. The most
popular strategy has been to build partnerships with U.S. firms that
already have the technology. Building Internet equipment is complicated
and expensive; Cisco alone spends more than $1 billion on research and
development annually. Rather than invest this type of money in-house,
European companies have realized it is smarter to find partners, and
then work to integrate products.
It is a strategy from which U.S. firms also benefit. These days "the
key to winning this market is being able to supply what is called
end-to-end solutions," explains Pim Bilderbeek, director of European
networking research at International Data Corp. "Operators want to be
able to buy both voice and data equipment from few sources, and be sure
it works together," she adds.
Siemens has partnerships with Internet suppliers Newbridge Networks
Corp. (NN) and 3Com. Alcatel has a loose alliance with Cisco, and just
agreed to jointly develop products with Ascend.
Some firms are buying their way into the field. Ericsson announced it
was looking at 10 Internet-product companies in the U.S., and has
already acquired one, Advanced Computer Communications, for $285
million. And the chairmen of both Finland's Nokia Corp. (NOKA) and
Alcatel said their companies were looking to acquire U.S.
Internet-equipment firms over the next year.
Siemens, for its part, is reorganizing its entire company to deal
with the need to have new Internet technology side by side with its
voice specialties. As of Friday, the German firm has one giant
networking division that deals with everything transported over
lines-voice, data, fax and video. "Converging technologies and
converging networks demand unified knowhow in one group," says Reiner
Schoenrock, spokesman for Siemens's public-communications network group.
Alcatel has found another niche. In contrast with the U.S., where
many Internet service providers, or ISPs, and companies build their own
networks, in Europe most firms lease their Internet space from bigger
telecommunications companies. To handle all these small networks,
carriers need special software. Alcatel has moved quickly in this field,
and some of the leading operators, including France Telecom (FTE) and
Italy's Infostrada, a joint venture between Olivetti SpA and Mannesmann
AG of Germany, now depend on its products.
"The plan is to take these core competencies of ours, build them up,
and convert them to the Internet world," said Martin Deprycker, vice
president of the Internet-access business unit for Alcatel.
Analysts say the Europeans are still low on the data-networking totem
pole. But they have strong relationships with the national carriers that
generate most of Europe's voice-equipment revenue. If Alcatel and
Siemens can cobble together an acceptable range of high technology, the
giant carriers may also turn to them for Internet needs.
"Saying that data will dominate implies that voice isn't important --
which just isn't true," said Lewis from Yankee Group, adding, "The
challenge for European companies is to take their knowledge of that area
and exploit it in the new Internet field."
Copyright (c) 1998 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.



To: Steve Fancy who wrote (61)10/5/1998 1:28:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3891
 
Dell, Bell Atlantic Announce Collaboration to Provide High-Speed ADSL Internet
Access On Dell Dimension PCs

BusinessWire, Monday, October 05, 1998 at 11:10

WASHINGTON, D.C.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 5, 1998--

Dell Expands ConnectDirect Program with Third ADSL Provider

In the latest evolution of its ConnectDirect(sm) strategy to
provide fast and easy Internet access to its customers, Dell Computer
Corporation (NASDAQ:DELL) today joined yet another industry leader to
provide ultra-fast ADSL Internet services on Dell(R) Dimension(R)
desktop PCs.
Dell, the world's leading direct computer systems company, and
Bell Atlantic said today they will collaborate to integrate Bell
Atlantic ADSL services with ADSL-ready Dimension PCs for home and
small business customers.
The Dell and Bell Atlantic initiative, which includes
compatibility testing between the services, modems and Dell PCs was
announced today at the National Press Club in Washington as part of
Bell Atlantic's introduction of ADSL services. The two companies will
also work to develop a process to help Dell customers determine if
they are eligible for Bell Atlantic ADSL Internet service.
ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line) services, where
available, transform ordinary phone lines into high-speed,
high-bandwidth conduits for accessing the Internet up to 125 times
faster than 56K modems. ADSL services also enable customers to access
the Internet and talk over the phone using the same line.
"We believe that ADSL is one of the strongest solutions for
providing our customers with high-speed access to the Internet," said
Janet Mountain, director of Dell's Dimension product group. "However,
for the best possible Internet experience, customers need more than a
network card to make their PCs ready for ADSL. That's why Dell is
leveraging its ConnectDirect initiative to work directly with leaders
in the online community to test and validate ADSL solutions and
provide a complete end-to-end customer experience with Dell PCs and
high-speed Internet solutions."
Dell expects to complete its efforts with Bell Atlantic by early
next year. In the meantime, Bell Atlantic customers can now purchase
Dell Dimension PCs with network cards for an ADSL connection with Bell
Atlantic services and modems.

About ConnectDirect

ConnectDirect is Dell's strategy to provide customers with fast,
easy and personalized access to the Internet through partnerships with
leaders in the online community. Currently the program includes
partnerships with AT&T WorldNet for ISP services and Excite for
customized Internet content. The program also includes partnerships
with Bell Atlantic, SBC Communications and US West for ADSL services
in nearly half the U.S. states. Dell has also selected Cisco Systems
Inc. as the modem provider for ADSL-ready Dimension PCs sold to US
West customers.

Dell Dimension PCs

Dell Dimension is the company's award-winning line of desktop PCs
for home and small business customers. The build-to-order PCs have led
the industry in a number of technology developments, including the
rapid transition to Intel(R) Pentium(R) II processors. For more
information about Dimension desktop PCs, visit Dell's Internet site
at: www.dell.com/products/dim.

Ranked No. 125 among the Fortune 500 companies and No. 363 in the
Fortune Global 500, Dell Computer Corporation is the world's leading
direct computer systems company, based on revenues of $15.2 billion
for the past four quarters. Dell designs, manufactures and customizes
products and services to customer requirements and offers an extensive
selection of software and peripherals. Information on Dell and its
products can be obtained through its toll-free number 1-800-388-8542
or by accessing the Dell World Wide Web site at www.dell.com.

Dell and Dimension are registered trademarks and ConnectDirect is
a registered service mark of Dell Computer Corporation. Dell disclaims
any proprietary interest in the marks and names of others.

CONTACT: Dell Computer Corporation, Round Rock
Bill Robbins, 512/728-4100 (Media Contact)
Bill_Robbins@dell.com
or
Marci Grossman, 512/728-3113 (Media Contact)
marci_grossman@dell.com
or
Don Collis, 512/728-8671 (Investor Contact)
Don_Collis@dell.com
or
Rob Williams, 512/728-7570 (Investor Contact)
Robert_Williams@dell.com

KEYWORD: TEXAS DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
INDUSTRY KEYWORD: COMPUTERS/ELECTRONICS COMED
INTERACTIVE/MULTIMEDIA/INTERNET TELECOMMUNICATIONS

Today's News On The Net - Business Wire's full file on the Internet
with Hyperlinks to your home page.
URL: businesswire.com

Copyright 1998, Business Wire