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Microcap & Penny Stocks : WLGS: World Wide Wireless Communication INC. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: CrazyTrain who wrote (5)11/18/1998 7:13:00 PM
From: Bulls  Respond to of 2957
 
Just went long this one today. Anyone got a share count on this one? I cannot find it. The news yesterday is awesome.



To: CrazyTrain who wrote (5)11/18/1998 7:18:00 PM
From: Bulls  Respond to of 2957
 
From WLGS hompage:


The VDMA Chip and Fast Internet Access
There has never been a chip like VDMA. It was designed and built to handle five times the speed and capacity of the hitherto most complex integrated circuit built for the digital cellular environment for mobile communication ever conceived. An intelligent, self-organizing network for Mobiles that accomplishes Location and Linkage of these units within such an amorphously defined System (IMLS). Calls can be vectored or relayed from mobile unit to mobile unit from several blocks to 50 miles or across a continent, since our advanced forward error correction circuitry prevents error noise from being propagated.

This same vectoring capability within a population of mobiles lets a call be completed by effectively seeing around corners and "through walls". This system functions without an infrastructure and so can meet the demands of an instant communication system for sudden natural disaster, an impromptu battlefield, or for any group anywhere in the world. The system also serves to link the Public Service Telephone Network with the IMLS.

Wireless ATM
A Solution for Voice & Data Networks:

"ATM" - Asynchronous Transfer Mode - is a packet technology, using short fixed-length packets delivered to their destination by an address contained within the packet.

Key benefits of ATM include rate scalability, transparency regarding application, and the ability to deliver traffic at rate and degrees of burstiness compatible with the applications running.

An ATM backbone provides the highest use of a fiber plant for combining multiple services such as, voice, video, and data, each with its own quality of service requirements. All services are multiplexed onto ATM virtual circuits and distributed directly to the hubs.

What is Wireless System ?

The basic wireless voice and data system consists of a cellular base station (hub) transmitting video, data, and telephony services to residential and business customers. Each subscriber is equipped with a small, unobtrusive antenna. Customers transmit upstream data and telephony signals back to the hub via the same antenna.

Features: The ideal wireless broadband network should include most of the following features:

Voice and data integration at very high speeds.

Efficient packet transport with minimal throughput delay.

18 Mbps per 6 MHz channel rates from hub station to subscriber using 16 QAM for MMDS, or 42.5 Mbps per 36 MHz channel with QPSK modulation for LMDS.

Bandwidth on demand (up to 10 Mbps) upstream.

Internet access using IP switching for IP over ATM switched virtual connection support.

Wireless telephony over ATM.

Research and Development - General Information

The R&D Business Plan

It is the philosophy of WWWC, its consultants and investment bankers that the most successful outcome of IPO companies derives from the development of a proprietary technology which may be licensed to established vendors (manufacturers/distributors) so as to provide a residual or royalty-based income. The initial expense of research and development is usually returned many times over on an annual and continuing basis. This is the only business model where the net income can approximate the gross income. The only recurring expenses are those of providing technology upgrades in order to maintain the "window of opportunity" defined by the technology.

The following articles are but a few opinions and success stories relating to our espoused strategy.

5-Year Projections
Internet Division. The assumptions are as follows:

The wireless data services (Internet) market will grow as per attachments (Pelton -"Wireless and Satellite Telecommunications"). Supporting attachments are also included.

The Stein Group will penetrate only those markets currently served by the six WWWC-CATV licenses.

These licenses will allow WWWC-Stein to penetrate 2/10th of one percent of the current market and will service one percent by the end of the fifth year.

WWWC will receive 50% of the net revenues which are computed on a 50% gross margin basis, i.e. $1,000,000 in gross revenues yields $500,000 in net (pre-tax) profits which are split 50-50, thus yielding $250,000 net to WWWC.

Wireless Phone Division. The assumptions are as follows:

The markets penetrated will be those currently dominated by wireless LAN systems as per Pelton, i.e., Paging, Citizen Band/Walkie/Talkie, etc., Wireless Emergency/Police, Industrial Wireless, etc.

Secondary markets such as private (personal) PCS, wireless PSX/LAN (fixed users) and military uses will be penetrated but are not included in the projections.

A licensing fee of 5% will be obtained from vendors manufacturing and distributing the phone on a royalty basis.

The market penetration will be 1% the first year, increasing to 5% during the fifth year.

Summary and Conclusion
WWWC presents a unique venture capital situation - an opportunity to realize the efforts of two new wireless communication technologies.

The WWWC-CATV or Internet plan brings a nationally recognized management group to implement and finance a cash-flow ready business involving one of the fastest growing markets in the U.S. and the World. The market presence is virtually guaranteed since the venue is regulated and therefore limited by FCC licenses.

As the company ramps up the network side of the business, the final R&D efforts of the "next generation" cellular phone will proceed to the completion of a production prototype by the end of 1998. At that time point, the technology will be licensed to acceptable vendors. At this point, the primary goals of the business plan will have been achieved, and a royalty-based income should propel the company's earnings well past our modest and conservative expectations.




To: CrazyTrain who wrote (5)11/18/1998 7:20:00 PM
From: Bulls  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2957
 
FROM WLGS homepage:


World Wide Wireless Communication Inc. (WWWC) - OTC Bulletin Board:WLGS, a Nevada corporation has acquired and/or developed proprietary technology, licenses and communications infrastructure to position the company on the leading edge of "next generation" developments in high-speed internet access (Internet Division) and digital cellular (PCS) phone research (Super-PCS Division). WWWC will operate through these two divisions as separately managed and financed profit centers.

INTERNET (ISP) DIVISION
The Internet (ISP) - Internet Service Provider - Division have three with access to forty-three other licensed demographic areas in the U.S.

The East Bay Area of San Francisco Bay is the keystone.

San Diego, CA and South Bend are next in importance.

The licenses allow WWWC to use wireless cable television (W-CATV) licenses and technology to offer high-speed digital Internet information (Data) rather than the conventional TV programming (Video). The company could, however, at any point in time configure the system to provide full interactive communications services - Data (Internet), Video (TV) and Voice (Phone).

This approach provides a network connectivity solution superior to other cable and wireless cable modems or alternative technologies in that it provides a combination of the following factors: (1) higher speed. (2) more efficient use of bandwidth, (3) better network manageability through a client-server architecture, (4) ability to scale, (5) protocol-independence, (6) ability to operate in wireless systems and other systems with or without return paths, (7) ability to manage multiple headends from a single PoP, (8) ability to utilize existing transmission infrastructure and (9) ease of installation and availability at affordable cost.

The table below provides information as to differences in the actual time required to download from the Internet seven specific examples of data-intensive content using (1) a telephone modem operating at 14.4 Kbps, (2) a telephone modem operating at 28.8 Kbps, (3) an ISDN modem, and (4) a wireless cable modem. The table reflects a comparison of access times under similar circumstances. Although response time in accessing information from the internet is primarily affected by the speed of transmission permitted by the modem connection, other factors affect the response speeds as well, including server speed and business, the speed of the computer at the client end, the speed of the server at the headend, and the speed of any intermediate transmission line and other factors. Accordingly, the response times illustrated in the table below may vary in actual operation depending upon the actual system configuration and other circumstances.

Actual Time To Download Information

Modem Type Nominal Speed Ratio Direct Mail
Catalog (1) Jupiter Photo (2) Audio (3) Netscape 3.0
Beta Download
Telephone 14.4 Kbps 711x 163 sec 149 sec 22.0 Min 2.1 Hrs
Telephone 28.8 Kbps 356x 108 sec 101 sec 13.9 Min 1.25 Hrs
ISDN Modem 128 Kbps 80x 46.0 sec 43.0 sec 5.2 Min 26.0 Min
WWWC Wireless
Cable Modem 10 Mbps 1.0x 4.5 sec 4.0 sec 33.1 sec 55.0 sec

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

L.L. Bean Catalog Page - Winter Tents.
Jupiter Photograph from jpl.nasa.gov image library - 128 Kbytes.
The Doors: People are Strange Audio - 1,040,416 bytes,
Using existing facilities and infrastructure, the speed of telephone modems is approaching a practical limit. Several alternatives that have been proposed by others in the industry include:

ISDN, a digital telephony service, already available on a limited basis in some locations, which has the advantage of being up to five times faster than standard telephone service, but is expensive. For providers, it has a substantial disadvantage in being used on circuit-switched technology which has a dedicated and continuously connected circuit for each simultaneous call, thereby significantly limiting the total capacity of the system and increasing its costs.

ADSL, RDSL and RADSL (collectively, XDSL), various series of new digital services that are circuit-switched and, therefore, inherently expensive to operate for the reason described above; in addition, the deployment of the services is extremely limited and will require substantial capital expenditures to improve the existing cable infrastructure, including installing expensive line cards and repeaters.

Installing optical fiber from the headend to the home, an enormous undertaking that would require building over the existing (coaxial, cable) infrastructure; widespread installation would be extremely expensive and slow, requiring a number of years (possibly, decades) - not considered a practical, near-term solution.

Service over wireless cable, employing wireless cable modems and equipment from Hybrid or other providers, can provide huge increases in speed, and has the advantage of using packet-switched technology. Packet-switching does not require every simultaneous call to have a continuously connected circuit, and instead routes labeled "packets" of data over shared circuits to their destinations. This has dramatic capital cost and time-to-market advantages over fiber to the home.

The company believes that users will overwhelmingly choose wireless cable service over the alternatives because of its speed and cost advantages. The market for wireless cable modems is expected to expand dramatically over the next several years.

WIRELESS PHONE DIVISION
The development of this "next generation" mobile or cellular phone has been referred to as the (1) "VDMA" - Virtual Division Multiple Access -, "SMART" - Specialized Mobile Autonomous Radio Transmitting - and (3) Super-PCS Phone - Personal Communication Services. For the sake of consistency, the WWW phone will be referred to as the SMART Phone.

The U.S. standard for digital mobile phone service was developed by Qualcom in the early 1990's. It is commonly referred to as CDMA or Code Division Multiple Access. The generic reference is PCS. Whether the wireless or cellular phone uses analog or digital technology, the costs for cell sites averages $500,000 each 6 mile x 6 mile. This infrastructure cost includes the tower, microwave dishes (transmitter/receiver), etc.

A recent WWW research update states that as the century turns, multi-million transistor microchips are being made that, within a year or two, will effect what will probably be the next major change for the 21st century. They will usher in the era of free worldwide wireless communications.

We foresaw the coming era several years ago and have filed patents for what we believe are the major design underpinnings of the new era. The VDMA units will be in production within nine months. A scaled-down version will be available by year's end.

Meanwhile, we at WWWC have completed our first major undertaking of the "SMART" - System for Mobile Autonomous Radio Tracking - program: the design is done for the microchip for the basic SMART handset. It needs only to be committed to silicon to become the nucleus of the next generation of CDMA handsets. CDMA is now recognized as by the far the most efficient and highest quality method of signal propagation ever devised, and WWWC laboratories has developed what may be the world's leading CDMA system as a subset of the SMART/VDMA handsets.

When we selected the CDMA circuit as the core design of our revolutionary } SMART/VDMA cell phone system, we did so because we needed the quality, spectral efficiency and power economy that only CDMA could provide. We did not expect the superior CDMA features would totally swamp the burgeoning handset industry worldwide and make it a product in sweeping universal demand, as has happened. Thus, now that we are ready to commit our CDMA circuit to silicon, we are revising our initial plan to include fine microchips as soon as possible for our customers' production. Although chips alone could be sold, we are quite capable of preparing a complete engineering package for the handset.