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To: Trooper who wrote (22870)3/2/1999 12:41:00 PM
From: Les H  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24154
 
AT&T, Lucent Technologies, and Motorola Create VXML Forum

Companies Seek Open Standard to Promote Voice Access to Web Services

BASKING RIDGE and MURRAY HILL, N.J., and CHICAGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 2, 1999--AT&T, Lucent
Technologies, and Motorola announced today the formation of the Voice eXtensible Markup Language Forum (VXML
Forum) to make the resources of the World Wide Web accessible by telephone. The Forum aims to drive the market for
voice- and phone-enabled Internet access by promoting a standard specification for VXML, a computer language used to
create Web content and services that can be accessed by phone.

AT&T, Lucent and Motorola will contribute their markup language technologies to the development of the open VXML
specification. Seventeen other leading companies from the speech, Internet and communications markets have agreed to
support the VXML Forum and play an active role in reviewing or contributing to the VXML specification. Industry supporters
include 3Com Corporation, Blue Diamond, British Telecommunications plc, Dragon Systems, General Magic,
Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Lernout & Hauspie, Nortel Networks, Nuance Communications, Online Anywhere, Philips, Registry
Magic, SpeechWorks, Unisys, Vocalis and Vogo. The initial specification will be available for public comment and
contribution next month, with the goal of submitting a final proposed specification for standardization to the World Wide Web
Consortium (W3C) later this year.

The VXML Forum seeks to promote a broadly supported standard that creates an open, platform-independent environment
and enables equipment and infrastructure providers, speech technology providers, speech application developers and content
providers, and communications service providers to participate in the growth of this market. In addition to giving users the
option of voice-enabled Internet and intranet access, expected benefits include new business opportunities for content
developers, greater ease of application development - and thus an expanded developer base - for the speech community, and
more rapid creation of differentiated services for carriers.

''Just as standardization of HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) drove the adoption of traditional Web applications,
standardization of VXML will drive the adoption of voice-enabled applications,'' said Maria Martinez, vice president and
general manager, Internet and Connectivity Solutions Division (ICSD), Motorola, Inc. ''The VXML Forum's efforts will not
only help to provide a crucial mobile component to Internet access, but will also offer Internet access to the 58 percent of
people who own a telephone but don't own or have access to a computer.''

One example of a voice-enabled application is a salesperson dialing into a corporate intranet from any phone and using
conversational interaction to receive real-time order status information. Similarly, users could access Web-based weather or
traffic information, banking transaction services, and other electronic commerce applications without touching a computer
keyboard.

''When people can interact with a Web application or an IP (Internet Protocol)-based service this way, the ordinary
touch-tone phone literally becomes the ubiquitous Internet access device,'' said Larry Rabiner, vice president of Research for
AT&T Labs. ''This technology makes it possible to launch a variety of Internet information and communications applications
from anywhere - you only need access to a telephone.''

A markup language is a high-level programming language that simplifies content development. To place an image on a Web
page, for example, a programmer writes a simple instruction in HTML calling for retrieval of a particular image file. Similarly, a
content developer could use VXML to program a particular audio prompt to play over the telephone.

''VXML will have profound impacts,'' said Lucent Speech Solutions President Dan Furman, ''changing the way we use the
phone - and perhaps the design of phones themselves - as well as changing the nature and evolution of the Web. By making it
easier to program Web applications for voice access, VXML can bring high efficiency to call center and intranet development.
And enhanced availability will increase the value of personalized Web applications, such as pages customized to deliver an
individual's selection of stock quotes, news, or other information.''

Other companies interested in seeing access to Internet information and content become voice- and phone-enabled may join
as supporters, contributors or adopters. The initial VXML specification will be based on AT&T's and Lucent Technologies'
phone markup languages and Motorola's VoxML(TM) language, which have common roots but have been developed
independently in the three companies. The aim of the VXML specification is to leverage the best of the companies' approaches
for the benefit of the entire industry.

For additional information on the progress of the VXML specification, go to the VXML Forum web site at:
www.vxmlforum.org.

AT&T (www.att.com) is the world's premier provider of voice and data communications, with more than 80 million
customers, including businesses, government and consumers. AT&T runs the world's largest, most powerful long-distance
network and the largest wireless network in North America. The company is a leading supplier of data and Internet services
for businesses and the nation's largest direct Internet service provider to consumers. AT&T also provides local telephone
service to a growing number of businesses.

Lucent Technologies (www.lucent.com), headquartered at Murray Hill, NJ, designs, builds, and delivers a wide range of
public and private networks, communications systems and software, data networking systems, business telephone systems,
and microelectronics components. Bell Labs (www.bell-labs.com) is the company's research and development arm.

Motorola (www.motorola.com & www.voxml.com) is a global leader in advanced electronic systems and services. It liberates
the power of technology by creating software-enhanced products that provide integrated customer solutions and Internet
access via wireless and satellite communications, as well as computing, networking, and automotive electronics. Motorola also
provides essential digital building blocks in the form of embedded semiconductors, controls and systems. Sales in 1998 were
$29.4 billion.