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Technology Stocks : America On-Line (AOL) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: David Petty who wrote (19053)5/27/1999 10:51:00 PM
From: Ed Forrest  Respond to of 41369
 
Prodigy adds Cable and Wireless users
Prodigy Communications (PRGY: news, msgs) said it will pay $50-$75 million for Cable & Wireless's (CWP: news, msgs) consumer and business Internet service. The amount is dependent on the number of customers which make the transfer. "Increasing our customer base is of key strategic importance," said Prodigy president David Trachtenberg. "We are able to support these customers nationwide without significant capital investment or additions to our existing work force."

This cannot be good news for AOL
Ed Forrest



To: David Petty who wrote (19053)5/27/1999 10:58:00 PM
From: Ed Forrest  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 41369
 

Hope this has not been posted.
Ed Forrest
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08:57 PM ET 05/26/99

AOL Europe planning fresh assault -FT

LONDON, May 27 (Reuters) - U.S. Internet group America
Online is planning aggressive new initiatives in Europe to get
more households connected, the Financial Times quoted the head
of AOL Europe, Andreas Schmidt, as saying on Thursday.
"By autumn we will be ready to roll out some pretty
aggressive initiatives to achieve our goal of having 10 million
households connected within three years," Schmidt told the FT in
an interview.
AOL has 2.8 million subscribers across Europe. In the United
States, it is the largest Internet service provider and AOL.com
is the most popular website.
Schmidt said Deutsche Telekom , which has a T-Online
service with three million customers, was unfairly
discriminating against AOL and others by forcing their customers
to pay higher phone charges than DT charges its own customers.
"The high prices of former state monopolies are a rip-off
for the customer that is holding back the natural development of
the European market," he told the FT.
He said he was drawing up plans to introduce flat-rate
services, already available in Britain and France, across
Germany and the rest of Europe from autumn. By then, AOL was
hoping for a ruling from the German telecoms regulator, due in
June, on DT's Internet access fees.
Longer term, AOL and Bertelsmann , the German
media group with which it joined forces in 1995, were eyeing a
possible stock market listing for AOL Europe to give the company
the financial flexibility to fund expansion by acquisition.
But Schmidt would not comment on the flotation idea, the FT
said.
Schmidt was also planning to bring to the European services
new portals -- Internet gateways that offers services like news,
share prices and games, the FT said. Compuserve, the online
service provider owned by AOL, would be developed as a distinct
alternative offering products for home-based professionals and
small businesses.
((London Newsroom +44 171 542 7717, Fax +44 171 583 3769,
uk.equities.news@reuters.com))

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