SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Voice-on-the-net (VON), VoIP, Internet (IP) Telephony -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (1548)10/16/1998 8:04:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3178
 
Top Innovations and Technologies in Networking to Run the World's Largest Short-Term, Real-Time Network - The InteropNet Voice Over IP, Remote Connectivity & Small Office Home Office, VPNs, <>

October 16, 1998 FOSTER CITY, Calif., Oct. 15 /PRNewswire/ via
NewsEdge Corporation -- Ziff-Davis (NYSE: ZD)
announces that the InteropNet at
NetWorld+Interop 98 Atlanta will be the focal
point of new innovations in networking as over
130 vendors contribute emerging networking
technologies to the largest mobile network in
the world. NetWorld+Interop 98 Atlanta will be
held October 19-23, 1998 at the Georgia World
Congress Center in Atlanta, GA.

The InteropNet is the premier example of
multivendor, multiprotocol interoperability in the
industry. This sophisticated network provides
highly reliable and leading-edge connectivity to
over 600 exhibitors and supports local and
remote site connectivity. The InteropNet
presents an excellent opportunity for exhibitors
and attendees to experiment with how different
technologies and manufacturers of equipment
interoperate and to test-drive some of the
latest technologies.

"The spirit of the InteropNet is most prevalent
as the contributors leave their competitive caps
and marketing spin behind and work
side-by-side for the advancement of technology
and open standards networking," said Jim
Martin, lead engineer for the InteropNet. "The
InteropNet addresses today's solutions in
perhaps one of the most demanding networking
environments -- the NetWorld+Interop event."

Key features of the InteropNet in Atlanta:

* Voice over IP

* Remote Connectivity -- wireless, xDSL, cable
modems running side-by-side

* IPSec, the open standard for IP security

Additional Technical Highlights include:

* 802.1Q VLAN standard to deliver multiple
networks over a common uplink

* Deployment of MPOA and LANE 2.0 over ATM
at 622Mb (OC-12)

InteropNet Applications Forum sponsored by
Network Computing

In its second year as a feature of the
InteropNet, the Applications Forum has matured
into a comprehensive investigation as it
provides live vendor demonstrations of existing
and emerging networked applications. This
year's Applications Forum will feature the
following:

* Small Office Home Office (SOHO)

This real office of the future will feature remote
connectivity. On display will be ISDN, Cable
Modems and xDSL solutions with a
demonstration of IP telephones-actual phone
receivers that plug directly into the network.

* Workplace Video Center

The Workplace Video Center will showcase
various video technologies available to
networks. Solutions such as Motion JPEG over
ATM, different streaming media broadcast and
on-demand solutions, and security video over
data networks will be demonstrated.

* Interactive NOC:

Modeled after the InteropNet Network
Operations Center, the Interactive NOC makes
available the applications running live on the
InteropNet. InteropNet Team Members will be on
hand to give demonstrations of these
applications including network management
tools and VPN solutions.

InteropNet Technology Tours sponsored by
Network Computing

The tours will provide both a basic and a more
in-depth look at the technologies being
showcased on the InteropNet. These free tours
are led by a NOC (Network Operations Center)
Team Member and are conducted every hour,
on the hour during the exhibition. To sign-up for
a tour, visit the InteropNet Kiosk located
adjacent to the InteropNet.

Network Operations Center (NOC)

The NOC is the mission-control center of the
InteropNet where teams of experts (NOC Team
Members) deploy and manage the network
during the event. NOC Team Members use a
variety of tools for performing protocol analysis,
configuration management, fault determination
and resolution.

Network Operations Center (NOC) Team
Members

The NOC Team Members and InteropNet Team
Members (ITMs) are world-class, industry and
academic, engineers who champion network and
telecommunications technology by volunteering
their time in the design, implementation and
operation of the InteropNet. Their diligence and
commitment in melding together different
products and technologies provides a test bed
that is unmatched. The NOC Team Members
pool their expertise to keep the InteropNet
smooth, coherent and reliable.

InteropNet Contributors:

As with any network of this magnitude, all types
of equipment, applications and services are
needed to design, build and manage the
InteropNet. By giving competitive organizations
the opportunity to work together through
human resources and product contributions, the
InteropNet Contributors bring to
NetWorld+Interop one of the most complex and
relevant networks to date.

About NetWorld+Interop ...

NetWorld+Interop provides networking, Internet
and telecommunications professional buyers
with a uniquely comprehensive forum for
education and evaluation of products and
services in order to make critical purchase
decisions. NetWorld+Interop affords buyers from
enterprises, carrier/service providers, and
resellers/integrators the opportunity to
experience live technology demonstrations
first-hand. It's this focus on advanced,
multi-vendor, multi-protocol, multi-service
interoperability technologies and solutions that
makes NetWorld+Interop the definitive
networking event.

About ZD Events...

ZD Events is the world's leading producer of
information technology events, with products
ranging from the IT industry's largest exhibitions
to renowned educational programs, custom
seminars and specialized vendor marketing
programs. It brings together the high-profile,
high-impact COMDEX and WINDOWS WORLD
brands with the educational focus and depth of
NetWorld+Interop, Seybold Seminars and other
leading industry events. ZD Events serves more
than 5,000 exhibiting companies and two million
attendees through over 50 events in 18
countries. These events have revolutionized the
way computers are bought, sold and distributed.
ZD Events is the events group of Ziff-Davis.

About Ziff-Davis...

Ziff-Davis (NYSE: ZD) is a leading integrated
media and marketing company focused on
computing and Internet-related technology,
with principal platforms in print publishing,
tradeshows and conferences, online content,
market research and education. The Company
provides global technology companies with
marketing strategies for reaching key
decision-makers.

For more information about NetWorld+Interop
Atlanta 98, visit interop.com.

For media/analyst registration call Gael Sandoval
at 650-372-7068.

For hotel reservations, call 800-962-6513.

NOTE: ZD EVENTS, the ZD EVENTS logo, the ZD
logo, COMDEX, NetWorld+Interop, WINDOWS
WORLD and Seybold Seminars are trademarks or
registered trademarks owned or used under
license by ZD Events Inc., a wholly owned
subsidiary of Ziff-Davis Inc., and may be
registered in the United States and other
countries. NetWorld is the registered service
mark of Novell, Inc. WINDOWS(R) and the
WINDOWS logo are trademarks of Microsoft
Corporation. Other product and company names
mentioned may be trademarks of their
respective owners.

InteropNet Contributors...

Diamond: Nortel Networks

Platinum: 3Com Corporation; Cisco Systems
Inc.; Fluke Corporation; FORE Systems Inc.;
Frontier GlobalCenter Inc.; Icon CMT
Corporation; Lucent Technologies; LAN-hopper
Systems Inc.; NetScout Systems Inc.; Texas
Instruments; Wandel & Goltermann Inc.

Gold: American Power Conversion; Concord
Communications; Dell Computer Corporation;
Extreme Networks; Hewlett-Packard Company;
IMC Networks; Innovative Workflow Engineering
Inc.; Interphase Corporation; Liebert
Corporation; NBase Communications Inc.;
Network Associates Inc.; Remedy Corporation;
Silicon Graphics Inc.; Sun Microsystems Inc.;
University of New Hampshire, Interoperability
Lab

Silver: Accelerated Networks Inc.; AG
Communication Systems; AG Group Inc.; Alteon
Networks; AMP Inc.; Aperture Technologies
Inc.; ARK PC Technology Inc.; Artecon Inc.;
Ascend Communications Inc.; Axis
Communications Inc.; BreezeCom Inc.; Castle
Rock Computing Inc.; CLARiiON Advanced
Storage Solutions; Compaq Computer
Corporation; Computer Associates; Crystal
Group Inc.; Cybex Computer Products
Corporation; DeskTalk Systems Inc.; Digi
International; Digital Link Corporation; E-COMMS
Inc.; EDGE Technologies Inc.; Empire
Technologies Inc.; Emulex Corporation; Exabyte
Corporation; Foundry Networks; GADZOOX
Networks Inc.; Ganymede Software Inc.; HAL
Computer Systems; HIP Enterprises; Hitachi
Computer Products (America) Inc.; Hummingbird
Communications Ltd.; I.S.T. isdn-support
technik GmbH; IEC Interface & Cable Solutions;
Inlet Corporation; Intel Corporation; Interactive
Networkx; InterTrust Technologies Corp.;
Ipswitch Inc.; IRE/SafeNet; KarlNet Inc.;
LANCAST Inc.; Larscom Incorporated; Linksys;
Loran International Technologies Inc.;
Manage.Com; Martin Gear Consulting Ltd.;
Microplex Systems Ltd.; Microsoft Corporation;
Net Optics Inc.; Netcom Systems; NetSuite
Development; netViz Corporation; Network
Appliance Inc.; Network Peripherals Inc.;
NextPoint Networks Inc.; Novell IncOlicom Inc.;
Packet Engines; PairGain Technologies Inc.;
Paradyne Corporation; Perforce Software;
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP; RADCOM
Equipment Inc.; RADGUARD Inc.; RealNetworks
Inc.; Rutgers University Computing Services;
Selsius Systems Inc.; Server Technology Inc.;
Service Metrics Inc.; Shomiti Systems; SolCom
Systems Inc.; Solid Information Technology
Ltd.; StarBurst Communications; Sysnet Inc.;
Telamon Inc.; TELES Corporation; Telexis
Corporation; Tivoli Systems Inc.; Transcend
Inc.; Transition Networks; Triticom; TrueTime
Inc.; TTC; University of Florida; University of
Oklahoma; Vero Electronics Inc.; Virginia Tech
Computing Center; Visio Corporation; Visual
Networks Inc.; Vixel Corporation; Xedia
Corporation; XLNT Inc.; Xylan Corporation

NOC Team Members: Alex Latzko, Rutgers
University Computing Services TD:NOG Research
& Development; Andy Shoemaker, Innovative
Workflow Engineering Inc.; Bert Lindgren,
LAN-hopper Systems Inc.; Bill Jensen, University
of Wisconsin-Madison; Brian Poynor, 3Com
Corporation; Carl Zwanzig, InterTrust
Technologies Corporation; Chris Elliott, Cisco
Systems Inc.; Chris Stradtman, Sysnet Inc.;
Christine Pecina, Nortel Networks; Clemens
Schrimpe, Interactive Networkx; Craig Watkins,
Transcend Inc.; Dave Pokorney, University of
Florida- Northeast Regional Data Center;
Demetrios Coulis, Nortel Networks; Dennis
Smith, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP; Doug
Moeller, Nortel Networks; Ed von Adelung,
Interphase Corporation; Eric Christensen, Oznog
Internet; Hadriel Kaplan, University of New
Hampshire-Interoperability Lab; Helen Garey,
Accelerated Networks Inc.; Jeff Taylor,
University of Oklahoma; Jim McGowen, Inlet
Corporation; Karl Auerbach, Cisco Systems Inc.;
Ken Krieger, HIP Enterprises; Marty Gear, Martin
Gear Consulting; Matthew Liste, Nortel
Networks; Neal Allen, FLUKE Corporation; Ron
Jarrell, Virginia Tech Computing Center, Ron
Pashby, Wandel & Goltermann Inc.; Steve
Hultquist, Service Metrics Inc.; Tracy Gatton,
NetScout Systems Inc.; Tripp Lilley, Innovative
Workflow Engineering Inc.



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (1548)10/16/1998 8:14:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3178
 
Spike Technologies' PRIZM BDS Compliant with FCC's New Two-Way Rules for Low Frequency Channels Recent Ruling Paves Way for Wireless Operators to Compete in Lucrative <>

October 16, 1998 NASHUA, N.H., Oct. 15 /PRNewswire/ via
NewsEdge Corporation -- Spike Technologies,
Inc., announced today that its PRIZM
Broadband Delivery System (BDS) is fully
compliant with the FCC's recent rulemaking
authorizing two-way transmissions in the
MMDS frequency band. PRIZM BDS has been
shipping worldwide for the past year and can
now be quickly deployed by operators in the
US market for two way, broadband
transmission of voice, video, and data
services over MMDS frequencies. The PRIZM
architecture is designed to operate between
1 - 10 GHz; MMDS is located between 2.1 -
2.7 GHz.

The FCC's ruling, which was finalized on
September 17, allows operators to provide
two-way digital services such as Internet
access, virtual private networking, video
conferencing, Voice over Internet Protocol
(VoIP), and IP telephony. The ruling comes at
a crucial time in the fixed wireless industry.

"The two way rulemaking for the lower
frequency bands opens the door for
operators holding this spectrum to offer the
multitude of services necessary to compete
in this converging marketplace," said Andrew
Kreig, President, Wireless Communications
Association.

The channels in the MMDS band are
particularly attractive for a number of
reasons. They offer a thirty-mile line of sight
range, which is significantly greater than the
1 - 2 mile range of the LMDS frequency band.
This difference allows an operator to service
more customers over a greater distance with
less equipment. Additionally, lower frequency
bands exhibit significantly less rain fade than
higher bands.

Spike's PRIZM BDS was designed specifically
to transmit and receive multiple high
bandwidth digital services over channels in
the lower frequency bands with maximum
spectral efficiency, allowing operators of
various size and scope to compete in the
enhanced services marketplace. PRIZM BDS
provides connectivity at rates of more than
10 Mbps, full duplex, covering a radius of 30
miles and an area of 2,800 square miles, while
employing as few as four, six MHz channels.

"The Yankee Group predicts that WLL
infrastructure build outs will represent over
$3.5 billion in annual revenues by the year
2001 in North America alone", said Mark
Lowenstein, Senior Vice President, WLL, The
Yankee Group. Mr. Lowenstein added that,
"The two way rule making puts Spike
Technologies in an excellent position to
capitalize on a significant slice of this market
as their product is ready to ship in
compliance with the recent FCC ruling."

Domestic customers for the PRIZM BDS
include Internet Service Providers (ISP's),
Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (CLEC's),
Long Distance Carriers, Wireless Cable
Operators, and educational institutions.
Executives at Spike see the recent ruling as
a strong sign of things to come in the United
States fixed wireless marketplace.

"Spike believes that the single major
impediment to the roll out by domestic
carriers has now been removed, paving the
way for widespread deployment in the US
market," said Edward Champy, Executive Vice
President, Spike Technologies. "Now that
operators can bundle two-way services into
their business model, they can take full
advantage of PRIZM BDS's broadband
capabilities and offer unparalleled services at
highly competitive prices."

"The real winners here are the small to
medium sized businesses and consumers who
are desperately seeking cost effective
alternatives for accessing multiple high
bandwidth services such as high speed
Internet, Video Conferencing, and Internet
Telephony," said Doug Carey, President,
Spike Technologies. "The only solution
available today that can compare with the
bandwidth and speed offered by the PRIZM
BDS is Fiber Optic Cable, and Fiber Optic
Cable is generally only a cost effective
solution for Fortune 1000 and large
companies. Spike Technologies' PRIZM BDS
gives operators a tool to provide these high
demand services to more customers, in far
less time, at an affordable price."

Spike Technologies officials were responsible
for influencing and shaping the direction the
FCC took with their recent ruling.
Suggestions from Spike's advisory team
adopted in the new ruling include a new
definition allowing a hub transceiver to be
co-located with a downstream booster
station, and improvements to the
complicated interference analysis method.

Spike Technologies, Inc. designs and
manufactures broadband, bi-directional,
wireless communications systems for the
delivery of voice, video, and data. Its
flagship product is the PRIZM Broadband
Delivery System. Spike Technologies has
offices in New Hampshire, New York, and
Texas. Spike's web page is located at
www.spiketechnolgies.com.

SOURCE Spike Technologies, Inc.

/CONTACT: Jeff Keith of Spike Technologies,
603-594-8856, jeff.keith@spke.com/ /Web
site: spiketechnolgies.com



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (1548)10/16/1998 8:32:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Respond to of 3178
 
Well we know now which area to put a few bucks hu! <g> Baby Bells Post Stronger Profits

October 16, 1998 The Associated Press via NewsEdge
Corporation : SBC Communications Inc. and
Ameritech Corp., two regional telephone
giants set to merge, on Thursday reported
higher third-quarter profits that matched
Wall Street expectations amid strong demand
for optional phone services and high-speed
data transmission.

< ^SBC<

SBC, which supplies service to the West and
Southwest, said its profits in the three
months ended Sept. 30 rose 48 percent to
$1.21 billion, or 65 cents per share on a
diluted basis. That was up from a profit of
$816 million a share, or 44 cents a diluted
share, in the year-earlier quarter.

Revenues rose 7 percent to $6.78 billion from
$6.33 billion.

Excluding the impact of one-time charges for
mergers and other costs, SBC's profits would
have grown 20 percent, meeting forecasts of
Wall Street analysts surveyed by First Call.

SBC, based in San Antonio, cited 33 percent
growth to $550 million in quarterly revenues
from high-speed data services sold to
businesses, as well as strong home demand
for Caller ID services. In addition, the
company added 4.7 percent more telephone
lines this past year.

SBC's stock closed up 3 percent in trading,
rising $1.18 3/4 at $44.56 1/4 on the New
York Stock Exchange.

The company hopes to merge with Ameritech
by next summer.

Another company SBC plans to buy,
Southern New England Telecommunications
Corp., posted a a 11 percent rise in
third-quarter profits despite the impact of a
26-day union strike against the supplier of
Connecticut phone service. Profits rose to
$54.5 million, or 79 cents a diluted share,
from $49.1 million, or 74 cents a diluted
share, in the year-ago quarter.

Revenues rose 6 percent to $540.3 million
from $509.7 million due to stronger demand
for cable TV, Internet access, mobile-phone
services and international long-distance
business.

___< ^Ameritech<

Ameritech reported its third-quarter profits
jumped 12 percent, fueled by customers'
growing preference for high-speed data lines
and its European investments.

For the three months ended Sept. 30, the
Chicago-based parent of phone companies in
Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin
reported net income rose to $645 million, or
58 cents a diluted share, from $576 million,
or 52 cents a diluted share, in the
comparable period a year earlier.

In the 1997 quarter, a gain of $37 million, or
4 cents a share, from the sale of its stake in
Sky Network Television Ltd. of New Zealand,
resulted in net income of $613 million, or 56
cents a diluted share.

The current earnings matched Wall Street
expectations, according to a survey of
analysts by First Call. Ameritech shares were
up 3 percent, or $1.56 1/4 a share at $52.12
1/2, in trading on the New York Stock
Exchange.

Revenue rose 7.1 percent to $4.29 billion
from $4.01 billion, helped by a 58 percent
increase in high-speed phone and data lines,
often used by people with computers and
Internet connections. That accounted for
one-third of the company's revenue growth
in the quarter.

More earnings growth came from the
company's investment in phone companies in
Belgium, Denmark and Hungary. Ameritech is
Europe's largest foreign investor.

Ameritech said cellular customers rose 19
percent to 3.5 million, while revenues from
services such as Caller ID and Call Waiting
rose 21 percent.



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (1548)10/16/1998 8:41:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Respond to of 3178
 
OT> Competitive LECs (CLECs) are "picking off the top," offering telecom services only<>

October 16, 1998 COMMUNICATIONS DAILY via NewsEdge
Corporation : Competitive LECs (CLECs) are
"picking off the top," offering telecom
services only in top end of small business and
residential market, BellSouth executives told
reporters Wed. In news briefing, Krista
Tillman, vp-small business services; Susan
McLaughlin, pres.-consumer services; and
Suzanne Detlefs, pres.- ad & publishing,
discussed impact of Sec. 271 process on
their customers. Tillman said "worry" is that
BellSouth will be left with rural areas and
other less profitable markets where universal
service obligations require it to offer service
while CLECs attack more lucrative areas with
combined local and long distance packages
that BellSouth is unable to match. Although
CLECs are entering market aggressively in
some regions, Tillman said, competitors are
concentrating on "pockets" and don't cover
broad service area. McLaughlin said
competitors are unlikely to offer service in
less profitable regions for "long period of
time." She emphasized appeal of
one-stop-shopping approach, especially for
residential customers, and said company
needs ability to provide long distance in order
to remain attractive to customers: "When we
put another offer out on the table, that is
not enough." She said customers are looking
for "more simplicity" and want "total bill to be
combined," option that BellSouth can't offer.
Most successful entrants into residential
market are offering local and long distance
and are "doing extremely well," McLaughlin
said. BellSouth offers limited
one-stop-shopping packages, providing
access to variety of services, including
wireless and wireline, and will expand with
Internet and messaging services, she said.
Tillman said BellSouth provides customers
with high level of service to build customer
loyalty, providing small businesses with
one-on-one service management and paying
attention to specific needs.



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (1548)10/18/1998 11:37:00 PM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3178
 
Searching for Value ISPs Struggle to be All Things to All Customers



If you live or work on Maryland's eastern
shore, you can get your Internet access from
Friendly Internet, part of Friendly Computer
Services Inc. But that's not all you can get,
and therein lies the future of Internet service
providers (ISPs), big and small.

Friendly Computer Services, located near the
Chesapeake Bay Bridge on Kent Island,
provides dial-up access, dedicated access,
personal computer repair, network design and Chinese cuisine.

"It's the best Chinese cuisine in Maryland," says Rattana Chhay, Friendly's
senior engineer. "People come all the way from Annapolis just for our
Chinese food."

There's also a "computer lab" on the premises, which allows people who
don't have access to the Internet from their homes or businesses to surf
for a few hours for a modest fee.

All this comes under the heading of "value-added" services, which is
where analysts and ISP executives say the future lies for ISPs. They say
the mere provision of access is no longer enough, and ISPs who survive
the next few years will be those who provide dedicated access, quality
guarantees, virtual private networks (VPNs), IP telephony, or--on Kent
Island, anyway--a really distinctive egg drop soup.

None of this surprises Hilary Mine, who follows Internet business for
Probe Research Inc. "They're not dying," Mine says of small ISPs.
"They're getting into dedicated services, and away from just doing dial-up.
These geeky little mom-and-pop shops don't need to make six figures to
be happy. And their advantage is customer touch."

And Chhay and his colleagues on Kent Island would find a congenial
spirit in Jack Danahy, director of strategic marketing at GTE
Internetworking, GTE Corp.'s ISP business.

"If I were a small ISP, I'd be thinking about the fact that the services I
traditionally offer are going to be less and less nifty to my customers,"
Danahy says. "The market used to be, 'Who can I get this service from at
all?' Now, I believe that ISPs who survive will be those who realize that
this is no longer sufficient."

Danahy believes that even small ISPs will move to web hosting,
e-commerce and other value-added services. He suggests that even small
and medium-sized businesses will want to engage in some form of
e-commerce, but will lack the expertise; here, he says, lies an opportunity
for small ISPs.

Souping It Up

The trend away from mere access, or the mere wholesaling of access,
seems to apply across size spectrum of ISPs. Revenues will continue to
climb from access, but customers will stay with companies who provide
the extras, analysts say.

The report "Sizing Internet Services 1998" issued in January by Forrester
Research Inc. suggests that Internet consumer access revenues will
increase from $5 billion to $22 billion by 2002, and that business access
revenues will increase from less than $1 billion in 1997 to $16 billion.

Consumers, Forrester says, will opt for speed wherever they can, which
bodes well for cable companies and cable modem makers who take
advantage of the demand. Businesses, the report says, are just about over
their fear of the Internet and will move to connect every employee to
e-mail to take advantage of e-commerce opportunities and host internal
websites.

PSINet Inc., a leading backbone provider, has organized business
divisions to take advantage of the new demands. Its Corporate Network
Services division, which a spokesman says accounts for 65 percent of its
revenues, sells everything from 56 kilobits per second (kbps) dial-up
services to multiple T1 lines. However, PSINet has begun to bundle
services: Internet protocol (IP) faxing and IP telephony, intranets and
VPN services. The company's applications and web services unit
provides web hosting, but also offers on-demand, real-time audio and
video streaming, audio-visual production services and web-based TV.
The TV application has been used to narrowcast events as diverse as
Hillary Rodham Clinton's commencement address at Fordham University
and Gloria Estefan's appearance at the opening of a cafe in Orlando, Fla.

Finally, PSINet provides wholesale services to other ISPs. "We see all
ISPs branching into commercial sales, which we think is a wise move, to
spread their base of users across different times of day and different
products," says John Kraft, vice president and general manager of carrier
and ISP services.

Kraft says PSINet will sell anything from 56kbps dial-up services to T3
dedicated access, and also will resell its web services.

"It's a classic wholesale business model," he says. "We succeed if they
succeed."

Even among wholesalers, however, the pressure to offer more to one's
customers is heavy.

"You can't just sell somebody a T1 and say, 'See ya later,'" says Mike
Kallet, senior vice president of engineering at ICG Netcom Inc. Jim
Geiger, senior vice president and chief marketing officer for Intermedia
Communications Corp., which purchased ISP Digex Inc. earlier this year,
explains the company now sells fiber access, frame relay, collocation,
primary rate integrated services digital network (ISDN) connections and
managed services.

"We are a very strong proponent of wholesale channels," he says. "One of
the reasons we liked Digex when we went looking for an ISP was that,
along with a fabulous brand in IP connectivity, we got a lot of innovation
in products," Geiger says. "We have our own internally managed security
service, a fax over IP service to be released in the fourth quarter, and then
voice over Internet protocol (VoIP) in the first quarter of 1999."

Intermedia also picked up a core of specialists in website hosting, and
Geiger says the company is making the most of those specialists. "Our
business always has been enterprise data," he says "We don't do dial.
What we want to do is hosted solutions, e-commerce solutions, IP on the
front end. The website organization really is creating a functionality for our
customers, not just a naked service offering."

Different Paths

Competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs) have taken different
approaches to ISPs and to the Internet in general. Some, such as
Intermedia, have bought ISPs and some have sought ISPs as customers.
Among the latter, some, like Intermedia, have formed special sales forces
whose job it is to concentrate on ISPs. Others, such as Focal
Communica-tions Corp., view ISPs as a subset of heavy
telecommunications users.

"ISPs are an important part of the future, but our focus is on large,
telecom-intensive corporate customers," says Bob Taylor, president and
CEO of Focal. "We divide them into three groups: information providers,
big corporations and value-added resellers."

ISPs fall into the first category, Taylor says, but he sees them moving over
into the third category, as their original business of providing access
becomes a commodity. In any case, Taylor thinks ISPs, big and small,
will be around for a long time. He points to the telecommunications
industry for a parallel: There are nearly 1,000 long distance companies in
the United States and more than 1,000 LECs, "most of which we've
never heard of," providing service and inventing products and "morphing"
from one niche to the next.

And then there are companies--CLECs, of course, but at least one
ISP--which have passed through a paradigmatic warp and become
integrated communications providers (ICPs).

Consider Kallet's company, ICG Netcom. Kallet comes from the
Netcom side of the merger, and says that his company has 500,000
dial-up access customers and offers every kind of connection from
56kbps to ISDN to T3. The company recently announced a wholesale
effort directed at ISPs. ICG Netcom has rolled out a national IP
telephony service in 31 cities, and will be in 166 cities by the end of the
year, Kallet says. He points out that ICG Netcom was able to roll out the
service within three months of the merger.

"We had plans for things like IP telephony, and we were able to
accelerate that [after the merger] because we had expertise in data and
switched-circuit expertise," he says.

Kallet says ICG Netcom will be a pipe to wholesale customers, but also
will offer virtual private networks, website hosting and the other
value-added services. He also sees a time, not far away, when companies
will outsource their information technology (IT) functions to companies
such as his. When that happens, Kallet believes, companies like his not on
will host websites, but e-mail servers, collaborative applications--all the
things that corporate IT departments typically do today. "Put a CLEC
together with an ISP and what have you got?" Kallet asks. "An ICP
(Internet communications pro- vider). And that's what we intend to
become."

Douglas Hanson, president and CEO of Rocky Mountain Internet Inc.
(RMI), has led his company to a similar synthesis, but from the other
direction. His company began as an ISP in Denver, has evolved to offer
IP telephony services in Colorado and has plans to offer such services in
the rest of the country. In June, RMI acquired Infohiway, a website
designer and search engine, and now offers the expertise Infohiway
brought to the company as a product line.

Hanson, who positively bristles at the idea of labeling his company either a
CLEC or an ISP, waxes philosophical on the convergence of the two.

"Why do CLECs exist?" Hanson asks. "Because ILECs exist. And when
ILECs can offer long distance service, they're no longer really ILECs, are
they? And if there are no ILECs, there are no CLECs, either. If you get
rid of one, you get rid of the other. So when that happens, what you have
left are companies that can provide end-to-end service. You have ICPs."

Copyright © 1998 by Virgo Publishing, Inc.



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (1548)10/20/1998 9:59:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Respond to of 3178
 
AT&T Reaches Out and Touches Voice Over IP

October 20, 1998 PC Week via NewsEdge Corporation : AT&T
Corp. has staked out its commitment to
next-generation voice services with a series
of initiatives designed to boost the
acceptance of digital voice-over- IP.

The efforts, part of what AT&T CEO Michael
Armstrong called a " multibillion- dollar bet"
on the technology, comprise a multipart plan
to freely distribute IP telephony software
development kits, and to establish two IP
telephony research laboratories and a global
clearinghouse service for the exchange of IP
telephony traffic, and embark on two new
business-focused trials of IP telephony
services.

With an anticipated rise in IP telephony use
and the backing of the technology from
well-known telecommunications providers
such as AT&T, "the good news for consumers
and businesses is that ... rates will come
down," Armstrong said earlier this month at
Internet World in New York. "We will do for IP
what we've been doing for years for the
telephone--we will make it safe, reliable and
secure."

Global trial

AT&T will be the first major company to
begin trials of a global voice-over-IP VPN
(virtual private networking) service when it
begins in the next few months a six-city test
of the technology within the company's own
networks and another market trial within the
same time frame with an undisclosed major
financial services company.

With the free development kits available now
for AT&T's Click2Dial and Chat'nTalk IP
telephony platforms to software and Web
site developers, AT&T officials believe they
will help spur new ways to use the services
and drive customer interest.

In addition, AT&T this month is offering a
promotional price cut on calls made using
Click2Dial or Chat'nTalk, officials said.
Regularly 15 cents a minute for each
participant, Click2Dial will be priced at 10
cents a minute this month. Chat'nTalk will be
15 cents a minute during October, down from
25 cents a minute, and the 50-cent call
setup fee will be waived during the
promotion. Both services will require users to
have two telephone lines to run voice and
data until AT&T developers solve the problem
of poor call quality when both transmissions
are carried on a single line; a date for a fix
has not been announced.

AT&T, of Basking Ridge, N.J., is (800)
345-0995 or www.att.com.



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (1548)10/20/1998 10:05:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3178
 
Voice-over-IP banking on H.323

October 20, 1998 ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING TIMES via
NewsEdge Corporation : Conventional wisdom
is that the days of circuit-switched voice are
drawing to an end. Packet voice-specifically,
voice-over-IP (VoIP)-is the wave of the
future. Consider these developments:

- Next-generation telcos such as Qwest and
Level 3 are defying traditional carriers by
offering voice services over high-speed IP
(Internet Protocol) backbone networks.

- Internet Service Providers (ISPs) are
transforming themselves into Internet
Telephony Service Providers (ITSPs).

- Enterprises are beginning to see the
savings from integrating with their voice and
data networks.

There is no doubt that VoIP is on an upward
growth curve.

Yet for a long time VoIP had no standard,
resulting in products that were incompatible
and confining IP voice services to a niche.
To enable widespread deployment and
associated cost savings, there must be a
standard that allows multivendor product
interoperability-and the H.323 standard from
the International Telecommunications Union
(ITU) is emerging as the de facto solution to
this problem. The VoIP Forum recently
ratified an implementation agreement that
defined an interoperability profile based on
H.323. Other standards and vendor
organizations such as ETSI TIPHON and the
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) are
also working to ensure interoperability with
H.323.

Essentially, H.323 was designed to be a
technology for multipoint-multimedia
communications over packet-based
networks, which include IP-based networks,
such as the Internet. It can be applied in a
variety of ways-audio only (IP telephony, or
VoIP); audio and video (videotelephony);
audio and data; and audio, video and data.
Of these, the first-VoIP-is clearly the driver
for its current popularity and stratospheric
growth. Longer term, the multimedia aspects
will be important in delivering value-added
communication services over Internet
Protocol networks.

H.323 has been around for a few years now.
Version 2-packet-based multimedia
communications systems-was defined in
January 1998 to accommodate additional
requirements for VoIP. New features
currently being added to H.323, such as
intergatekeeper communications and
fast-connection mechanisms, will result in a
new version's being stan- dardized in the
next year or so.

H.323 specifies four kinds of components
that, when networked, enable point-to-point
and point-to-multipoint multimedia
communications: terminals, gateways,
gatekeepers and multipoint control units.

A user can employ the H.323 terminal for
real-time bidirectional multimedia
communications. A terminal must support
audio communications and can optionally
support video or data communications. It can
be either a PC or a standalone device,
running an H.323 stack and multimedia
applications. The primary goal of an H.323
terminal is to be compatible with terminals on
other multimedia networks-and H.323
terminals may be used in multipoint
conferences. Because the basic service
provided by an H.323 terminal is audio
communications, it plays a key role in
IP-telephony services.

Gateways to interoperability

One goal for development of the H.323
standard was interoperability among
multimedia services networks via gateways.
Although gateways are not required for
communications between two terminals in an
H.323 network, they facilitate
interoperability. They connect two dissimilar
networks and perform any network or
signaling translation required for
interoperability. They also translate protocols
for call setup and release, convert media
formats among networks and transfer
information between H.323 and non-H.323
nets. Translation among audio, video and
data formats may also be performed by the
gateway.

The gateway has the characteristics of both
an H.323 terminal on the H.323 network and
the other terminal on the non-H.323 network
it connects. For example, a gateway can
connect and provide communication among
an H.323 terminal and SCN networks
(including all switched telephony networks,
e.g., PSTN).

Gatekeepers provide such services as
addressing, authorizing and authenticating
terminals and gateways; managing
bandwidth; accounting; billing; and charging.
They may also route calls. Although
gatekeepers in H.323 networks are optional,
if they are present terminals and gateways
must use their services, including translating
addresses, controlling admissions, controlling
bandwidth and managing zones.

The gatekeeper supports bandwidth control
and can route call-signaling messages
between H.323 end points.

When an end point sends call-signaling
messages to the gatekeeper, the gatekeeper
may accept or reject the call.

Multipoint control units support conferences
of three or more H.323 terminals. All
terminals participating in a conference
establish a connection with the control unit,
which manages conference resources,
negotiates among terminals to determine the
appropriate audio or video codec, and,
possibly, handles the media stream.

An H.323 zone is a collection of all terminals,
gateways and multipoint control units
managed by a single gatekeeper. A zone
includes at least one terminal, has one
gatekeeper and may include gateways or
multipoint control units. A zone may be
independent of network topology and may be
composed of multiple network segments that
are connected via routers or other devices.

Although H.323 is independent of the packet
network and the transport protocols it
specifies protocols for audio codecs, video
codecs, H.225 RAS, H.225 call signaling and
H.245 control signaling. It also specifies the
use of two protocols-the real-time transport
protocol (RTP) and real-time transport
control protocol (RTCP)-defined by the IETF
for real-time media transport.

RTP provides end-to-end delivery services of
real-time audio and video. It provides
payload-type identification, sequence
numbering, time stamping and delivery
monitoring.

RTCP provides control services. Its function
is to provide feedback on data distribution
quality.

G.711 supported

An audio codec encodes the audio signal
from the microphone for transmission on the
transmitting H.323 terminal and decodes the
received audio code, which is sent to the
speaker on the receiving H.323 terminal. All
H.323 terminals must support at least one
audio codec (G.711). A video codec encodes
video from the camera for transmission on
the transmitting H.323 terminal and decodes
the video code that is sent to the display on
the receiving terminal. Support of such video
codecs as H.261 is optional.

H.225 registration, admission and status
(RAS) is the protocol between end points
(terminals and gateways) and gatekeepers.
The RAS is used to register, control
admission, change bandwidth and status,
and disengage procedures between end
points and gatekeepers. H.225 call signaling
establishes a connection between H.323 end
points. H.225 call signaling sets up
connections between H.323 end points over
which real-time data can be transported.

For example, H.225 protocol messages are
carried over TCP in an IP-based H.323
network. If there is no gatekeeper in the
H.323 network, H.225 messages are
exchanged between the end points. When a
gatekeeper exists in the network, the H.225
messages are exchanged either directly
between the end points or between the end
points after routing through the gatekeeper.
The method chosen is decided by the
gatekeeper during the RAS admission
message exchange. The admission messages
are exchanged between end points and the
gatekeeper on RAS channels.

The most popular H.323 interworking is IP
telephony, when the underlying network of
H.323 is an IP network and the interoperating
network is SCN. SCN includes PSTN and ISDN
networks.

Copyright c 1998 CMP Media Inc.

By Rajeev Gupta, Engineering Director,
Emerging Technologies, Trillium Digital
Systems Inc., Los Angeles

<<ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING TIMES --
10-19-98, p. PG72>>



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (1548)10/20/1998 10:06:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Respond to of 3178
 
VoIP To Exchange Minutes

October 20, 1998 INTERNETWEEK via NewsEdge Corporation :
Internet telephony guru Jeff Pulver last week
said he will launch a trading exchange to help
Internet telephony service providers market
excess capacities on a global basis.
Min-X.com, or The Minutes Exchange, will
initially be fueled by face-to-face
negotiations taking place at least four times
a year. The first meeting will take place Dec.
10 and 11 in New York. In the future,
Min-X.com transactions will take place over
the Web.

Copyright c 1998 CMP Media Inc.



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (1548)10/20/1998 10:12:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Respond to of 3178
 
Love these catch-e phrases> Ring! "It's For You, It's the Internet Calling"; The iPhone(R) Makes Getting Online As Easy As Picking Up The Phone

October 20, 1998 PROVO, Utah--(BUSINESS WIRE) via
NewsEdge Corporation -- It's a phone. It's a
web browser. It's an e-mail connection. It's
smaller than a notebook, and one seventh
the price of a standard PC. It's the
award-winning iPhone -- developed by
InfoGear Technology Corp. and now being
introduced by Big Planet, The
InterNetworking Company -- and it's going to
change the way we get online forever.

With an introductory retail price of $299.00,
the iPhone combines the ease of use of a
standard telephone with the high-tech
capabilities of an online Internet telephony
device, and allows touch-screen access to
e-mail, the Internet, and the World Wide
Web, at a fraction of what a standard
Internet-ready computer would cost.

"The online world is ready for the iPhone,"
said Richard King, president of Big Planet. "By
utilizing the iPhone, as either a main online
source or a secondary connection unit,
consumers now have a simpler, more
affordable, and complete conduit to the
Internet," he added.

Combining advanced telephonic features --
call waiting, three-way calling, caller ID, and
a 100-entry call log -- with such state of the
art Internet access features as a
touch-screen 640x480, 7.4 inch 16-shade
grayscale display, a fully-functional attached
QWERTY keyboard, and an integrated
plug-and-play HTML 3.2 compatible browser,
the iPhone is the Internet appliance of
tomorrow -- here today.

The iPhone includes POP3 email compatibility,
an easy-to-use touch screen keypad, comes
loaded with 2 Megabytes of DRAM, and
storage for over 200 email addresses. Simply
plug the AC adapter into your wall, a phone
line into the iPhone, and you're surfing the
web through your telephone.

"The iPhone is the perfect device for anyone
who needs access to the Internet," added
Michael Anderson, vice president of Big
Planet. " Whether Mom and Dad want to give
additional access to the kids, or check their
email in the kitchen over the morning cup of
coffee, if you have the space for a phone,
you have space for the iPhone."

The iPhone is just one of the many
integrated offerings from Big Planet, who is
committed to enhance the way people learn,
communicate, work, shop, and play. Unique
in Big Planet's strategy is their "one-to-one"
distribution channel, combining high-tech
with "high touch." This personal approach
helps take the fear out of technology and
makes the Internet more accessible.

"We believe the network marketing channel is
ideal for the iPhone," said Ed Cluss, CEO of
InfoGear Technology Corporation, "and in Big
Planet we have found a partner with the
resources necessary to bring our innovative
product directly to the consumer."

The iPhone is available now through the Big
Planet Store, at bigplanet.com,
and comes pre-programmed with Internet
Access through Big Planet's nationwide
service provider, offering dialup access in all
fifty states. As part of Big Planet's strategy
to simplify connectivity to the Internet,
users can select one of Big Planet's three
levels of service -- "AccessOne" ($9.95 per
month for 10 hours of Internet access, plus
$4.95 for iPhone use); "Access Unlimited"
($19.95 per month for unlimited Internet
access, plus $4.95 per month for iPhone
use); or "AccessPro" ($24.95 per month for
unlimited Internet access, iPhone use,
multiple e-mail accounts and content
filtration).

About Big Planet

Big Planet, a Provo, Utah-based
InterNetworking(TM) company, is an
innovative provider of communications and
technology products and services for
individuals and small businesses.
InterNetworking is the next revolution in
direct marketing, combining the power of
one-to-one relationships with the emerging
global Internet opportunity to improve the
way we Learn, Communicate, Work, Shop
and Play.

Through Big Planet's network of Independent
Representatives, the company offers an
array of integrated, high quality, technology
products that combine new levels of
customer value to capture key customer
connections to the home and small office
with services such as Internet access,
dynamic web pages, voice/data
communications, e-commerce, education and
more. For information about Big Planet and
its products and services, visit the Big Planet
Web site at www.bigplanet.com, or call (801)
345-7000.

About InfoGear Technology Corporation

Founded in December 1995, InfoGear
Technology Corporation is a privately held
company focused on the rapidly growing
market for Internet appliances and their
related services. InfoGear has developed the
iPhone(R), the award-winning Internet
screenphone, which is manufactured by
CIDCO(R) Incorporated. The iPhone(R) is
currently distributed in the United States,
Australia, South Africa, and New Zealand.
InfoGear also operates the InfoGear
Network(TM), providing network information
solutions for Internet appliances, in
conjunction with content provider partners,
electronic commerce partners, and selected
ISPs. Visit InfoGear on the World Wide Web
at infogear.com.

iPhone is a registered trademark of InfoGear
Technology Corporation. InfoGear and the
InfoGear Network are trademarks of InfoGear
Technology Corporation. CIDCO is a
registered trademark of CIDCO Incorporated.
Big Planet is a trademark of Big Planet, Inc.
All other trademarks and registered
trademarks are the properties of their
respective owners.



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (1548)10/21/1998 9:22:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3178
 
idt signs up resellers to handle net2phone internationally

October 21, 1998 HACKENSACK, NEW JERSEY, U.S.A.,
Newsbytes via NewsEdge Corporation : After
several months of seeing its Net2Phone
Internettelephony software sell itself over
the Web, IDT [NASDAQ:IDTC] has started
signing up resellers to push the application
worldwide.

The move marks a change of pace for IDT,
Newsbytes notes, and signals the start of
what the company calls its new worldwide
reseller program, aimed at medium-to-
large-sized companies.

Central to this push is a new version of
Net2Phone called Net2Phone Pro, which is
billed as a hardware and software system
that allows users to make high quality phone
calls through their phones and/or PBX
(private branch exchange) at much lower
calling rates.

Net2Phone is actually a single port Internet
phone system, Newsbytes notes, that routes
voice calls across the Internet to IDT's
gateways around the world. Calls are then
dropped on to the local country PSTN (public
switched telephone network) for routing to a
standard phone line.

According to IDT officials, Net2Phone Pro
incorporates a specially developed version of
Quicknet Technology's Internet PhoneJack to
provide the plug-in for any regular phone
system.

Under the firm's new program, Net2Phone Pro
will be sold wholesale to resellers and
distributors worldwide. The firm says that it
believes that a technically oriented reseller is
the ideal channel to bring Net2Phone Pro to
corporate customers.

According to IDT, it has already
test-marketed the Net2Phone Pro system in
three major international metropolitan areas
with great response, and expects its
worldwide reseller program to be a success
as well.

Jonathan Rand, the firm's vice president of
international sales, said that the Net2Phone
Pro system is ideal for resellers who already
understand the Internet and/or the
telecommunications industry.

"The installation of Net2Phone Pro is simple
but best provided by a local support team.
The calling service is designed to create a
significant long-term revenue stream based
on repeated international long distance
calling," he explained.

Further details of the Net2Phone Pro system
can be found on the unit's new Web site at
net2phonepro.com .



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (1548)10/21/1998 9:26:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3178
 
ibm offers helping hand to internet telephony ventures

October 21, 1998 INTERNET BUSINESS NEWS via NewsEdge
Corporation : IBM has confirmed that it is
planning to help telecomms companies offer
cost- saving telephone services over the
Internet and private networks with IP
routing. The company will offer network
software, hardware and access software
including the DataBeam Gatekeeper to
manage VoIP calls and the IBM Scalable VoIP
gateway based on the RS/6000. IBM also
plans to deliver IDT's Net2Phone PC-to-
phone software and its phone-to-phone
services. Meanwhile, Sun Microsystems is
planning to support VoIP by offering
carrier-grade solutions to telco OEMs. The
company aims to provide a range of products
on the UltraSPARC platform to deliver
appropriate levels of integration and
performance for the diverse needs of
Internet telephony.

[Copyright 1998, M2 Communications]



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (1548)10/21/1998 9:27:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 3178
 
cisco buffers pbx offerings by acquiring selsius systems

October 21, 1998 CTI News via NewsEdge Corporation -- While its TV
commercial catch phrase "Are you ready?" is
directed at potential customers, San Jose,
Calif.-based Cisco Systems Inc. [CSCO] may well be
asking the same of its competition after acquiring
privately-held Selsius Systems Inc. of Dallas last
week.

By spending $145 million in common stock and cash
to grab Selsius, a 51-employee supplier of network
PBX systems for high- quality telephony over IP
networks, Cisco can accelerate the transition from
conventional, pro-prietary circuit-switched PBXs to
multiservice, open LAN systems capable of aiding
the next step in data/voice integration.

"Cisco has fired the starting pistol in the race to kill
the PBX," says Jay Batson, CEO of PingTel, a
Boston-based startup also building Selsius-style IP
PBX systems. "In a single deal, they have defined
what new enterprise voice systems will look like.

"In five years, all voice systems will be fully-native
IP systems with Ethernet phones, call control
software on servers, and IP/PSTN gateways to
connect to the 'old world,' " he says. "Every player
that wants a piece of the voice action must follow
Cisco's lead onto the IP PBX train - or get left
behind."

Such an acquisition could help the market for open
NT-based PBXs take off, says John Money, vice
president of research for Boston-based H.C.
Wainwright & Co., an equity research house.

"I really do expect Cisco to be a strong player in
this market," Money says. "There are other
communications server companies now that will
scramble to find their own partnerships."

Selsius' IP phones and call manager software initially
will enable small and medium businesses and branch
offices to migrate voice traffic onto packet data
networks. Cisco will extend the technology to the
full campus environment and enable virtual call
centers and unified messaging.

The acquisition is subject to various closing
conditions.

(Jay Batson, PingTel, 781/238-5758; John Money,
H.C. Wainwright & Co., 617/227-3100; Doug Wills,
Cisco, 408/527-9475, cisco.com.)

CTI Industry Stock Price Performance Oct. 19, 1998
Company 10/19/98 1-week 1-month 3-month
Ticker change change change
Allstar
ALLS $1.8 120.83% -34.09% -51.67%
ALLTEL
AT $44.75 -3.24% -0.42% 2.58%
Applied Voice
AVTC $16.63 -6.34% -23.12% -23.04%
Aspect
ASPT $12.69 -24.81% -50.00% -62.89%
AT&T
T $61.63 5.12% 4.45% 4.34%
Brooktrout
BRKT $13.50 3.85% -1.82% -23.40%
Centigram
CGRM $6.38 8.51% -30.14% -44.57%
Comdial
CMDL $9.25 17.46% 15.63% -32.11%
Dialogic
DLGC $20.69 -5.97% -25.11% -43.13%
Executone
XTON $0.84 8.00% -27.03% -57.81%
Genesys
GCTI $21.13 59.43% 8.68% -34.75%
GeoTel
GEOC $22.38 -5.79% 11.18% 5.29%
IBM
IBM $139.38 6.49% 11.78% 15.96%
Inter-Tel
INTL $14.13 31.40% -7.38% -19.57%
Linkon
LKON $0.81 4.00% -18.75% -45.83%
Lucent
LU $76.00 14.07% 4.38% -19.89%
MCI Worldcom
WCOM $50.94 7.66% 9.25% -9.14%
Melita
MELI $11.00 36.43% 18.92% -23.48%
Microsoft
MSFT $102.94 3.20% -2.31% -12.72%
Mitel
MLT $9.00 6.67% -9.43% -38.20%
Mosaix
MOSX $5.69 18.18% 26.39% -20.18%
Natural Microsystems
NMSS $7.38 -21.33% -30.99% -42.72%
Nice Systems
NICEY $14.88 17.82% -52.96% -61.61%
NEC
NIPNY $35.19 0.18% 4.26% -26.50%
Nortel
NT $35.69 26.33% -12.15% -35.55%
Periphonics
PERI $5.06 0.00% -15.15% -17.34%
Premiere
PTEK $5.44 52.63% -0.57% -38.30%
Rockwell
ROK $35.69 4.39% -10.22% -25.16%
Sun
SUNW $50.75 12.78% 4.24% -2.40%
Sprint
FON $75.19 7.22% 3.80% 2.65%
Source: CTI NEWS

[Copyright 1998, Phillips Publishing]