Vaulting the Walls with Wireless: AT&T may use cellular to invade the Bells' local-phone turf
AT&T is furiously working on a technology that would allow it to bypass the wired network in cities and towns across the nation. Using a combination of digital cellular and personal communications systems (PCS), a low-cost digital wireless technology, AT&T could begin offering location conne...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Bloomberg businessweek (Online) 1997-01 (3510), p.85 |
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creator | Amy Barrett in Washington, Peter Elstrom in Chicago, and Catherine Arnst in New York |
description | AT&T is furiously working on a technology that would allow it to bypass the wired network in cities and towns across the nation. Using a combination of digital cellular and personal communications systems (PCS), a low-cost digital wireless technology, AT&T could begin offering location connections as early as late this year. If the effort succeeds, customers in many regions of the country would be able to use the same cordless phone to call from home, around town, and in the car - and pay only slightly higher rates than for wired calls. There is a huge financial incentives for AT&T, Sprint and other long-distance carriers to take the wireless route. When they use these setups to connect subscribers to their long-distance networks, they will avoid the access charges levied by local carriers to complete their calls. |
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Using a combination of digital cellular and personal communications systems (PCS), a low-cost digital wireless technology, AT&T could begin offering location connections as early as late this year. If the effort succeeds, customers in many regions of the country would be able to use the same cordless phone to call from home, around town, and in the car - and pay only slightly higher rates than for wired calls. There is a huge financial incentives for AT&T, Sprint and other long-distance carriers to take the wireless route. 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Using a combination of digital cellular and personal communications systems (PCS), a low-cost digital wireless technology, AT&T could begin offering location connections as early as late this year. If the effort succeeds, customers in many regions of the country would be able to use the same cordless phone to call from home, around town, and in the car - and pay only slightly higher rates than for wired calls. There is a huge financial incentives for AT&T, Sprint and other long-distance carriers to take the wireless route. When they use these setups to connect subscribers to their long-distance networks, they will avoid the access charges levied by local carriers to complete their calls.</abstract><cop>New York</cop><pub>Bloomberg Finance LP</pub></addata></record> |
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source | PAIS Index; Business Source Complete; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals |
subjects | American telephone and telegraph company Cellular phones Cellular telephones Communications sector Market potential Personal communications systems Product development Regulation Service introduction Telecommunications Telephone Telephone companies Telephone service United States Wireless communications Wireless networks |
title | Vaulting the Walls with Wireless: AT&T may use cellular to invade the Bells' local-phone turf |
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