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To: Dale Baker who wrote (8798)5/17/1999 12:28:00 AM
From: Mad2  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 18998
 
Dale, Here's something from the Daily Mail (London) on X-Stream. The URL's at the end might be helpful.
Best Regards, Mad2

Copyright 1999 Associated Newspapers Ltd.
DAILY MAIL (London)

May 5, 1999

SECTION: Pg. 52

LENGTH: 593 words

HEADLINE: Web-wise fans make Net gains;
MONEY MAIL

BYLINE: Wayne Asher

BODY:

TEMPO, the electrical goods retailer, has launched what it is billing as the first truly free internet service.

Screaming.net offers free internet access at evenings and weekends if you switch your telephone account to Surrey-based Localtel.

You can keep your usual phone number, and Localtel hopes new customers making peak-hour calls will make up for the cost of the free calls off-peak.

One point to watch is that the service could generate vast amounts of internet traffic and will need to be able to handle this.

Tempo's move is the latest salvo in a price war that has seen many internet service providers (ISPs) scrap monthly access fees. But are there any catches? Here are the key questions:

Q WHAT do you get?

A FREE online access.

But with the exception of Screaming.net you must pay the cost of a local phone call.

X-stream offers free calls at certain times.

Q WHO offers this?

A ABOUT 30 ISPs.

Dixon's Freeserve is easily the largest, with more than 1.1 million users.

But Virgin.net is also free; Tesco.net is, too. Then there are smaller companies, including Arsenal Football Club, whose fans receive a mine of useful information about the Gunners.

Q SO WHAT'S the catch?

A CALLS to the help-line are charged at premium rate, usually 50p a minute. With traditional internet firms, which charge a monthly fee, help costs nothing.

Virgin gives the choice of either paying GBP 1 a minute for helpline calls or a monthly fee of GBP 5.99 for unlimited calls.

A handful of firms do not offer a telephone helpline at all. Instead you must email your queries, which is hard if you can't get online in the first place.

Q SO IS it worth signing up with a free firm?

A YES. The traditional ISPs usually charge about GBP 10 a month, and you are unlikely to spend that on calls to the helpline.

Q SHOULD I switch if I'm already with another internet firm?

A YOU have to balance the subscription money you save against other factors, such as telling your friends that you have a new email address.

You may have to reprint stationery and business cards, too. Or you may have a personal website hosted by the old internet firm, and you will have to shift this.

Q BUT don't the fee-charging firms offer exclusive content?

A YES, in the case of AOL and Compuserve, but not in the case of well-regarded no-frills firms such as Global Internet.

AOL costs GBP 16.95 a month (or GBP 4.95 for those who are only online for three hours a month); Compuserve costs GBP 6.50 a month for five hours and then GBP 1.95 for each extra hour.

But do you really need this exclusive content?

Some of it may already be available for free on the web. On the plus side, these are global firms which you can access anywhere - you don't need a separate account to pick up email when you are travelling.

Q ARE there any free services which don't charge a fortune for the helpline?

A YES. Barclays.net - which goes live soon - has no monthly subscription to pay, while helpline calls cost 8p a minute at peak times and 3p to 4.2p a minute at other times.

But you have to bank with Barclays to qualify.

* WAYNE ASHER is editor of This Is Money, the Daily Mail's financial website at www.thisismoney.com

USEFUL CONTACTS

Screaming.net

www.screaming.net

Virgin - www.virgin.net

Freeserve

www.freeserve.co.uk

AOL - www.aol.co.uk

Arsenal FC

www.arsenal.co.uk

Compuserve

www.compuserve.co.uk

Tesco - www.tesco.net

X-stream

www.x-stream.co.uk

LOAD-DATE: May 6, 1999



To: Dale Baker who wrote (8798)5/17/1999 12:32:00 AM
From: Bear Down  Respond to of 18998
 
dialspace.dial.pipex.com

Seems to be the registrant of noiseworks.com



To: Dale Baker who wrote (8798)5/17/1999 12:33:00 AM
From: Mad2  Respond to of 18998
 
Dale, This one comes from the Economist Intellegence Unit

Document 3 of 57.

Copyright 1999 The Economist Intelligence Unit Ltd.
All Rights Reserved
EIU ViewsWire

May 4, 1999

LENGTH: 175 words

HEADLINE: Africa Industry: IT, telecoms, media round-up

BODY:
COUNTRY BRIEFING

FROM THE ECONOMIST INTELLIGENCE UNIT

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY: British service provider X-Stream is to start
offering free Internet connection to South African subscribers. The
company expects to register 120,000 users in its first year, rising to
500,000 by year three, and will finance operations principally through
advertising revenue.

TELECOMS: Intelsat is to conduct a three-month rural telephony trial in
Senegal. Under an agreement with the local carrier, Societe Nationale des
Telecommunications du Senegal, Intelsat will test wireless local loop and
very-small aperture technology in Gardoul, Mbour and Tivaouane, offering
airtime charges as low as $0.10 per minute.

MEDIA: South African cable broadcaster Multichoice is to shut one of its
three Nigerian broadcasting stations. The Onitsha station in the east of
the country is not financially viable, but Multichoice will continue to
broadcast from Port Harcourt and Lagos.

SOURCE: Business Africa



LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

LOAD-DATE: May 07, 1999



To: Dale Baker who wrote (8798)5/17/1999 12:33:00 AM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 18998
 
Click on the X-Stream Central icon and you will have access to the press releases.



To: Dale Baker who wrote (8798)5/18/1999 9:15:00 AM
From: Jeffrey D  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 18998
 
"Journalist":<<I went to visit that site. There is no company background on XSNI, unlike the other Noiseworks clients. And the link to News Releases didn't work for XSNI.>>

"Journalist," unlike you, I had no trouble finding the following off of the Noiseworks site. Is it that you are just too lazy to do your own research or is it that you just do not know how? Jeff

<<
Europe's First Free Internet Service Launched by Noiseworks

2 June 1998 - Noiseworks has been chosen by Canadian Internet Provider X-Stream Inc to launch Europe's first free Internet Service. With this, users will save the current £10 per month subscription fee, a major barrier to broader use of the Internet. The service, which pays for itself by attracting sponsors who advertise at the bottom of the users' screen, is looking to attract 12,000 'subscribers' within its first three months. Noiseworks will be handling all national, consumer and trade relations and will particularly target TV coverage.

>>