To: Mad Bomber who wrote (15908 ) 4/19/1999 7:18:00 PM From: Frank Ferrari Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 21342
Microsoft takes a stake in a DSL company.news.com Microsoft looks to NorthPoint for DSL By Corey Grice Staff Writer, CNET News.com April 19, 1999, 3:50 p.m. PT update Microsoft said today that it will invest $30 million in NorthPoint Communications, its second stake in a high-speed digital subscriber line provider. As part of the deal, Microsoft has committed to buying 100,000 DSL lines over the next two years. The software giant has made a number of moves recently in the cable, fiber optic, and DSL sectors, aimed at creating a market for the company's products and increasing demand for its Internet properties. Last month, the software giant took a similar stake in Rhythms NetConnections, a NorthPoint competitor which had a strong initial public offering earlier this month. NorthPoint is set to go public in about two weeks. Do you want to know more? Read related news View story in The Big Picture Go to Message Boards Search News.com Like the Rhythms deal, Microsoft and NorthPoint will work on a co-branded MSN portal. NorthPoint will offer the revamped Web site to about 85 Internet service provider partners once it is developed. QUOTE SNAPSHOT April 19, 1999, 12:59 p.m. PT Rhythms Netconnections Inc. RTHM 64.0000 -17.0000 -20.99% Covad Communications Group Inc. COVD 74.7500 -15.5000 -17.17% by symbol by name > more from CNET Investor Quotes delayed 20+ minutes Together the companies will develop specific high-speed programs for businesses and will work together to a create standards-based content delivery interface to help the industry create broadband-focused platforms, applications, and tools. Also, British communications company Cable & Wireless and Concentric Network, an Internet service provider, each recently invested $5 million in NorthPoint's preferred stock, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission document filed today. Concentric also committed to buy a certain number of DSL lines over a two-year period. The investments are another shot in the arm for both the start-up telco and the nascent broadband technology. DSL is a technology that allows for high-speed data and Internet transmissions over standard phone wires. A primary competitor to cable modem technology, DSL has limited deployments to date. But industry executives and analysts have high hopes for DSL in the business market, if not the consumer sector. NorthPoint, Rhythms, and Covad Communications are DSL newcomers that are targeting small and mid-sized businesses. Local phone companies such as US West and SBC Communications instead are using DSL to reach out to mass market consumers. NorthPoint also signed a distribution deal today with Enron. The energy giant is building a fiber optic network and is set to launch ePowered Media Cast, a new video streaming service. NorthPoint will serve as one of eight initial video-cast distributors. NorthPoint recently received smaller investments from fiber optic telecommunications carrier Frontier and Verio. The company's IPO is expected the week of May 3. NorthPoint will offer 13 million shares at a range of $16.50 to $19.50 each.