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To: Midnightsun who wrote (42403)4/18/1999 3:47:00 AM
From: Midnightsun  Respond to of 50264
 
Technology is moving at lightning speed. How about the following gadget.

Great News-Watch AOL go up Mon.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - America Online Inc. (NYSE:AOL - news) is expected to introduce a
variety of gadgets, including a screen phone, that allows people to access the Internet without
having a personal computer, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

The idea is to make AOL a pervasive presence in consumers' lives, secure member loyalty
and broaden AOL's advertising reach, the newspaper said.

Through these gadgets, AOL members could access their electronic mail and web pages via
a device about the size of a dictionary. Screen phones looks much like a standard telephone,
but include a screen and a small keyboard, according to the Journal. Alcatel SA, the French
telecommunications giant, is seen as a likely partner in the venture, the newspaper said.

Unlike personal computers, consumers could keep their phones in a living room or kitchen.
Also, because the phones are designed to hook up to the Internet, consumers could get
online in seconds without a lengthy boot-up process.

Alcatel has said it plans to market its WebTouch screen phone with an American strategic
partner but has declined to name any companies.

The Journal reported that Patrick Liot, president of Alcatel's consumer and professional
division, deflected questions about whether AOL was the potential partner. He said the
question should be directed to Barry Schuler, AOL's no. 3 executive who is in charge of the
company's consumer device strategy.

Alcatel's phone, like several other Web gadgets, does not run on Microsoft Corp.
(Nasdaq:MSFT - news)'s Windows operating system but on Java software from Sun
Microsystems Inc (Nasdaq:SUNW - news), the Journal said. AOL and Sun have recently
formed an alliance after AOL bought Netscape, the maker of the popular Web browser.