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To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (2112)12/14/1998 9:01:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Respond to of 3178
 
State authority & Commerce Dept.? Notmyvote> FCC Mismanaged Implementation of Telecom Act?

Ranking House Commerce Committee Democrat John Dingell
(MI) railed against FCC "mismanagement" of its job of
implementing the Telecom Act at a Washington conference
December 11. He said he plans to join Telecom Subcommittee
Chairman Billy Tauzin (R-LA) in reintroducing legislation to curb
the FCC's authority. Such legislation would give state regulators
the power to determine whether local phone companies have
opened their local markets to competition enough to enter the
long distance market.

Dingell was particularly critical of the way the FCC is regulating
local phone companies. He said: "The FCC seems bent on
protecting one industry against another." Dingell's proposed
legislation also would allow incumbent companies to offer
advanced networking services without regulation. For example,
the Bell companies would be able to provide services that cross
long distance lines, which is not permitted now for traditional
telephone services.

"There are no monopolies on data transmission," he said, so such
regulation is not needed. After addressing the conference,
sponsored by the Federal Communications Bar Association
(FCBA) and the Practising Law Institute, Dingell told reporters
that the legislation might even be stronger, and that he was
considering proposing to move most of the FCC's authority to
the Commerce Department.



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (2112)12/14/1998 9:05:00 AM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Respond to of 3178
 
E.spire Asks States for Help in Negotiations With BellSouth

E.spire Communications says it has reached impasses in
interconnection contract renewal negotiations with BellSouth
(BS) in eight states and has asked state commissions to arbitrate.
E.spire and BS are negotiating replacements for 1996
interconnection agreements due to expire in the next few months.
E.spire cited 97 specific disputed issues related to the provision
of extended links as an unbundled network element (UNE),
alternatives to caged physical colocation, specific colocation
installation intervals, performance measurements, penalties for
nonperformance, reciprocal terminating compensation,
unbundling of advanced digital services, and cost-based
recurring and nonrecurring charges for UNEs. The states include
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi,
South Carolina and Tennessee. BellSouth called the filings a
"normal part of the negotiation process" for interconnection
contracts and said it hopes for a quick conclusion to arbitrations
so the companies can get on with business.



To: Stephen B. Temple who wrote (2112)12/14/1998 10:06:00 PM
From: Stephen B. Temple  Respond to of 3178
 
Bell Atlantic Awarded Patent for Rate-Adaptive DSL Technology FYI

December 14, 1998 -- Bell Atlantic has been
awarded a significant, broad-ranging patent
stemming from the pioneering work the
company did with digital subscriber line
(DSL) technology in the early 1990s. Bell
Atlantic has already begun efforts to license
the technology covered by this patent
across the industry.

The U.S. patent -- number 5,812,786 -- was
issued to Bell Atlantic Network Services,
Inc., on September 22, 1998. The inventors of
record are John Seazholtz, Wendell Sims and
Kamran Sistanizadeh. Mr. Seazholtz, who has
since retired, was Bell Atlantic's chief
technology officer in 1995 when the patent
application was filed. The new DSL patent is
the 302nd to be awarded Bell Atlantic.

Early plans for DSL technology were for the
delivery of video programming at fixed
transmission rates. Bell Atlantic's newly
issued patent covers rate- adaptive DSL,
which makes it possible to change the rate of
a DSL transmission "on the fly.''

The effect of using Bell Atlantic's invention
is to greatly increase the flexibility of DSL.
The enhanced flexibility extends the effective
"reach'' of the technology, increasing the
number of households that can be provided
a high-speed link. It also expands the range
of communications services that DSL can
support, such as accessing the Internet and
telecommuting.

"DSL technology will enable millions of
homes to be equipped with high speed
connections to the world's
telecommunications networks during the
next five to ten years by using existing
telephone lines, even while these same lines
continue to be used for voice telephone
calls,'' said Larry Babbio, president and chief
operating officer, Bell Atlantic. "New forms
of interactive, TV-like communications will
result that will transform the way people
work and play in the next millennium. Bell
Atlantic is proud of the role its innovation
and breakthroughs have played in turning
this technology into a range of useful
services.''

Across the country, both incumbent
telephone service providers and others have
already begun to offer high-speed Internet
access services using rate- adaptive DSL
technology that is now patented by Bell
Atlantic. Bell Atlantic itself launched a set of
Infospeed sm DSL services on Oct. 5. These
are now available in selected communities in
Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C.,
and Northern New Jersey, with new markets
being opened each week. The pace of
deployment is expected to accelerate across
all segments of the industry next year as
international standards for the technology
are approved.

Early Experimentation with Video
Transmission:

Bell Atlantic first began experimenting with
DSL technology in 1992. It was in October
1992 that the company announced plans to
use DSL to develop a service that could
deliver feature films, television dramas,
educational programs and more, immediately
after a customer placed an order.

The plan was to digitally encode movies and
TV programs using compression algorithms
conforming to international standards set by
the Motion Pictures Expert Group, or the
so-called MPEG 1 and MPEG 2 standards.
The plans called for compressed videos to
be transmitted across the public switched
telephone network at one of several fixed
data rates, depending on the nature of the
source material and whether it was
pre-recorded or broadcast live.

Bell Atlantic moved forward with its plans
and in April 1993 became the first company
in the world to deploy DSL technology
outside a laboratory and to use it to deliver
video-on-demand programming. Thus was
initiated a development effort that extended
for more than three years and involved
thousands of customers in the United States
and Italy. Bell Atlantic aspired to launch a
new industry, dubbed Interactive Multimedia
Television or IMTV, that would deliver not
just videos on demand, but also shopping
services, enhanced education,
news-on-demand and much more. An entire
generation of revolutionary "new media''
applications was envisioned.

Advent of the World Wide Web:

Concurrent with Bell Atlantic's development
of IMTV capabilities, however, the World
Wide Web became increasingly ubiquitous.
By 1995 it was apparent that new media
services would become widely available via
the personal computer and the Internet first,
not through the TV set and IMTV
technology. Accordingly, Bell Atlantic had
already begun to redirect its new media
development efforts to capitalize on the
growing demand for Internet access and
World Wide Web-based services, even
while the company continued to develop a
video-on-demand service. It was in this
context that Bell Atlantic invented the new
techniques for DSL technology, which led to
the patent that was awarded this September.

Bell Atlantic has been awarded 321 patents
and has 163 patents pending. The company
also has 20 that have been "allowed,'' which
means that their award is imminent, for a total
of 504 patents awarded or in the pipeline --
more than twice as many as any other
regional Bell company.