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Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony @ Equity Investigations, Dear Anthony, -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Fast Eddie who wrote (25855)3/31/1999 2:26:00 PM
From: Brasco One  Respond to of 122087
 
WaveCall to provide the same service as eFAX for free.

same business, just diffrent pig.

SANTA BARBARA, Calif., March 31 /PRNewswire/ -- CallWave Inc.(SM) today
announced that FaxWave, its ubiquitous product that provides people with FREE domestic
U.S. telephone fax numbers that are used to route faxes via email, has successfully
concluded its test phase and is now available to all persons over the age of 18.

FaxWave delivers faxes to e-mail accounts. These faxes are accessible wherever a
laptop or computer can dial into the Internet. FaxWave has proven itself to be a product
with broad appeal that spans demographics and generations.

In a technology review published March 29, 1999 in The Oregonian, Mike Francis said:
"The sign-up process took less than three minutes, and when I was finished, I sent myself
a regular fax of the NCAA basketball playoff brackets. Within five minutes it arrived in
my e-mail box, crisp, clear and as foolish as the day I made my forecasts. If you want,
you can print your faxes, though some might say that defeats the purpose."

According to David Hofstatter, executive vice president of CallWave, "FaxWave viewing
software is already installed on over 300 million Microsoft Windows 95, 98 and NT. For
most Windows users, this means no bothersome and risky software downloads. Fax
viewing is instantaneous, and faxes can be forwarded as email attachments to co-workers
who will be able to open and view the fax.

"We have FaxWave customers who tell us that 100 people in a large corporation are
sharing one fax number and one fax machine. Now every employee in even the largest
enterprise can get their own FREE, dedicated fax line. Given everything we've learned in
the last two months, we believe we will enroll millions of subscribers by the end of 1999."

"Mark my words, this is significant," said Geoffrey Kleinman in the March Edition of the
Kleinman Report. "The demand for these sorts of services could mirror that of the free
web mail."

CallWave provides its users with a privacy promise and one of the company's core values
is to protect FaxWave users' communications.

"CallWave seems to take a consumer's right to privacy seriously," said Anne Jennings,
marketing communications manager of TRUSTe. "We have been working with them to
help CallWave develop appropriate information gathering practices and policies right from
the start. CallWave contacted us even before their website was live, and they are now in
the final stages of our privacy review. We look forward to awarding CallWave our
TRUSTe mark when their application is complete."

How it Works

FaxWave delivers all faxes sent to your personal fax number to your email address.
Windows users use a standard Microsoft Windows supplied viewer to review and print
received faxes. For many customers, no new software needs to be installed. Faxes can be
read using other viewers on Apple Macintosh, SUN, IBM, and HP UNIX systems. The
FaxWave service uses Windows NT running on fault tolerant Compaq Proliant servers.
For more information visit CallWave's web site at callwave.com.