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To: RocketMan who wrote (6441)3/11/1999 6:02:00 PM
From: Jenne  Respond to of 41369
 


AOL and SBC team up in digital jam
AOL's Pittman says online titan mulling more deals

By Bambi Francisco and Michael
Stroud, CBS MarketWatch
Last Update: 12:16 PM ET Mar 11, 1999
Net Stocks

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. (CBS.MW) -- America Online, fresh
from signing a high-speed access agreement with Southwestern
Bell, said Thursday it's mulling similar deals with other Baby
Bells, cable and wireless companies.

"We've held discussions and looked at or done technology
studies on all of these" providers, AOL President Bob Pittman
said in an interview with CBS.MarketWatch.com at Variety's
Interactive Summit in Rancho Mirage, Calif.

The comment came just after the online
company (AOL) said it will offer a premium
upgrade this fall for subscribers in regions
where SBC provides the so-called DSL
service, also known in techno-terms as
asymmetrical digital subscriber lines. See
press release.

The digital upgrade will give AOL members
souped up bandwidth for their personal
computers over existing phone lines at a cost
of $20 per month, which has been
increasingly demanded, the companies said.
The companies said the DSL service can zip
up Net connections more than 50 times faster than a 28.8 analog
modem.

Southwestern Bell (SBC) already offers ADSL service to about 2
million of its customers and plans to offer it to 8.4 million homes
by the end of the year. SBC has customers in California, Texas,
Missouri, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Kansas.

In addition to faster download times, the service gives customers
"instant-on" access to AOL without the need to dial-in through a
modem. SBC customers can continue to use their phone or fax
over the same phone line.

Shares of America Online (AOL) rose 3 to a
52-week high of 95 13/16. SBC (SBC)
gained 1 5/8 to 53 5/16.

Halfway home

Together with a previous deal with Bell
Atlantic (BEL), roughly half of AOL's
customers now have at least the potential to
high-speed service.

"Clearly, we're looking at other ways" to
reach the remainder of AOL's customers with
high-speed transmission, Pittman said.

"From what we know about the consumer,
and our ability to upgrade the consumer, it
probably makes us the critical ones to make
broadband reach its potential," Pittman said.

America Online partnered with Bell Atlantic
on a service that will be rolled out this
summer. Currently, AOL's more than 16 million members don't
have DSL service. Then again, less than 10 percent of the
country can receive high-speed Internet access.

Asked whether AOL would consider being acquired by a large
telecommunications company such as AT&T (T), Pittman
replied: "No comment."

There's been long-running speculation that AT&T and AOL might
be considering such a move, but AT&T Chairman C. Michael
Armstrong said last week that his company is "not interested" in
acquiring the online company.



To: RocketMan who wrote (6441)3/11/1999 6:27:00 PM
From: Out_of_the_Trap  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 41369
 
The volume was very low again today. Does this bother you at all?

PAS