SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : LAST MILE TECHNOLOGIES - Let's Discuss Them Here -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mark Sherry who wrote (3304)4/4/1999 1:01:00 PM
From: John Stichnoth  Respond to of 12823
 
THREAD: Some old news, but which helps explain some of the deals that have been announced on the DSL front in the last month:

news.com

PointCast plight reveals Microsoft plans
By John Borland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
April 2, 1999, 12:35 p.m. PT

news analysis In the wake of the collapse of broadband talks between PointCast
and telephone companies, it has emerged that Microsoft was a key player in
trying to create a flashy new high-speed Internet service for consumers.

Until very recently, it appeared that Microsoft had yet to put together a coherent
broadband strategy despite making large investments in cable companies, analysts said.

America Online and other ISPs made aggressive moves early in the year to take their
services onto the telephone companies' high-speed DSL networks, signing partnership
deals with SBC Communications and Bell Atlantic. Meanwhile, Microsoft made
considerable investments in cable systems but was silent on DSL.
That has changed in recent weeks, as Microsoft has finally made its own public steps
toward DSL access and using the technology to extend the use of its Web content.

But the final collapse of talks between PointCast and a coalition of local telephone
companies yesterday gave a glimpse into the company's early hopes for a grander service
that could have helped link it much more closely to the technology's success.

The Newnet dream
Since early last fall, PointCast and a consortium of big local telephone companies had
been in talks to create a consumer-focused, high-speed Net
service that linked PointCast's content and push technology
with the telcos' high-speed DSL networks.

Dubbed "Project Newnet," the idea was to create a national,
high-profile broadband service that would compete with the
cable companies' @Home and Road Runner services. The
group went as far as signing a letter of intent and by
mid-February had even shopped the idea around to ad
agencies to help develop a branding campaign.

According to sources close to the negotiations, Microsoft
played a key role in this consortium and indirectly helped
trigger its collapse.

"The telcos brought Microsoft to the table early on," said a
source close to the PointCast negotiations. "But then the
telcos felt Microsoft wanted too much control, and Microsoft
fell out of the deal in mid-February."

Microsoft's presence was important enough to the deal that the company's departure
destabilized the agreement, sources said. After the software giant left the coalition,
BellSouth began looking for new partners to give the group the scale it needed to be a
national organization.

BellSouth's other partners, US West and Bell Canada, were willing to go through with the
deal even without Microsoft, sources said. But BellSouth wanted an exit clause if SBC or
Bell Atlantic didn't sign up, sources added, and the deal ultimately fell apart.

Meanwhile, it wasn't long after Microsoft's reported departure from the coalition that a
smattering of other DSL announcements began popping up for the first time.

In mid-March the company announced that it would take a small stake in Rhythms
NetConnections, a start-up DSL provider that focuses on business customers. Microsoft
also would create a series of customizable broadband portal pages for Rhythms' clients
using its MSN Web portal, the company said.

Last week the company finally said it would roll out DSL trials for MSN Internet Access
customers in four cities and that it plans to expand the service later this year. That effort
is being made through MCI WorldCom's UUNet, which in turn buys its DSL access from
other local providers.

Some analysts said the PointCast and later MSN deals were most likely on different
tracks within the company, however.

"I surmise that Microsoft's role [with Newnet] would be to provide content and back-end
systems," said Abhi Chaki, a senior analyst with Jupiter Communications. "That's very
different from Microsoft Network and getting those customers high-speed access."

Microsoft is now focused on bringing its MSN Internet subscribers broadband access
through telcos' DSL lines, despite its investments in cable companies and the Road
Runner cable Net service.

"Right now DSL seems to be the best way for us to reach our subscriber base," said Will
Diefenbach, group product manager for MSN's Internet Access division.