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Technology Stocks : Audio and Radio on the Internet- NAVR -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: country bob who wrote (15907)5/3/1999 7:20:00 AM
From: Scott Kleinhans  Respond to of 27722
 
CB

At 7:17am it looks like NAVR knocked the BMFM thread from the number one spot on the Hot List.

Scott

Ooops, almost forgot, Go NAVR/VVTV!!



To: country bob who wrote (15907)5/3/1999 7:26:00 AM
From: Scott Kleinhans  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 27722
 
CB

More info from the S-1/A regarding MediaOne. Then see the PR from AT&T and MediaOne.

------From NETR S-1/A

- MediaOne. We have created a co-branded Web site with MediaOne, the
broadband services arm of MediaOne Group.
MediaOne is a leading provider
of cable modem (broadband), telephone and wireless communications
services. Some of the MediaOne Web sites contain links to NetRadio that
enable MediaOne subscribers to listen to our programming through a higher
quality connection than is normally available through a standard telephone
line.

--------T and MediaOne PR

dailynews.yahoo.com

Monday May 3 4:07 AM ET

MediaOne Accepts $54 Bln AT&T Offer-WSJ
NEW YORK (Reuters) - MediaOne Group over the weekend accepted AT&T's offer to buy the cable-TV company giving Comcast Corp. (Nasdaq:CMCSA - news) until Thursday to reply with a counteroffer, the Wall Street Journal reported Monday.

The Journal said people familiar with the negotiations had disclosed that MediaOne's board Saturday formally accepted AT&T's offer, deciding it was a better deal than the $48 billion in non-voting stock originally offered by Comcast, the newspaper said.

Quoting people familiar with the deal it said MediaOne's board, which held a special meeting in Dallas, notified Comcast Saturday afternoon of its decision and subsequently called off its merger agreement with Comcast.

The move set the clock ticking for ComCast, which now has until Thursday night to make a counteroffer, the newspaper said. MediaOne and Comcast declined to comment, the Journal reported.

The newspaper quoted a person familiar with Comcast's strategy who said the Philadelphia-based Comcast was ''very encouraged'' that it could come back with a winning counterbid.

Since AT&T made its surprise offer to buy MediaOne two weeks ago, Comcast has been brainstorming with bankers and a team of advisors on ways to salvage its proposal. It won't be easy or cheap: AT&T's offer includes voting stock and more than $20 billion in cash, the newspaper reported.

Comcast's offer included no voting stock. That would have remained in the hands of the Roberts family, whose stake in Comcast would have been cut to about two percent in equity, but with 80 percent of the voting stock. AT&T seized on that disparity when it devised its bid, the newspaper said.

In recent days, the battle for MediaOne has drawn in other powerful tech companies such as software giant Microsoft and America Online Inc. (NYSE:AOL - news), both of which have expressed interest in joining forces with Comcast, the newspaper said.

Microsoft and America Online, the world's leading Internet service provider, would be interested in the ''broadband'' market for phone, interactive video, high-speed data and Internet services, the Journal reported. Also, neither company would want to see AT&T become too so powerful in the cable industry, the newspaper said.