AT&T promises IPTV to low income residents
By Marguerite Reardon
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: May 9, 2006, 12:08 PM PDT

http://news.com.com/AT38T+promises+IPTV+to+low+income+residents/2100-1034_3-6070272.html?tag=nefd.top

(My comment: I would like to see DSL available in the most rural areas 
where the cable co's won't touch..how will this work if people are still 
on dial up)

AT&T said it will serve 5.5 million low income households as part of its 
initial deployment of Internet based TV services.

Speaking at the Detroit Economic Club on Monday, Chief Executive Edward 
Whitacre said the company plans to spend $4.6 billion through 2008 on 
Project Lightspeed, a new network AT&T is building to extend fiber optic 
cabling further into neighborhoods to allow more bandwidth to carry 
services such as IPTV. Whitacre said that within the next three years 
the network will reach 19 million homes, of which 5.5 million will be 
low income.

AT&T and Verizon are upgrading their networks to offer TV service to 
compete directly with cable companies, which have already begun offering 
phone service. In an effort to speed up their deployments, AT&T and 
Verizon have been lobbying local, state and federal lawmakers to change 
franchise laws to let them enter new markets more quickly. But cable 
operators have fought back by accusing the phone giants of targeting 
wealthier neighborhoods as they upgrade their networks, leaving poorer 
neighborhoods without access to the new services.

AT&T's promise to address low income communities should help quell these 
accusations, the company hopes.

"The company is affirming (its) commitment to assure the public that all 
income levels--including low income households--have early access as 
this cutting-edge technology is deployed," AT&T said in a press release.

While Verizon is offering TV service to communities in several states, 
including Florida, Texas, Massachusetts and Virginia, AT&T is just 
starting to roll out its IPTV service. So far, only a few neighborhoods 
in San Antonio, Texas, are able to get the service. A wider deployment 
is planned for later this year.

Whitacre also said AT&T announced initiatives that will help rural 
customers access high-speed services. In areas where its DSL network and 
Project Lightspeed will not reach, Whitacre announced, AT&T will resell 
satellite broadband from WildBlue Communications in some regions 
starting in June

WildBlue's service is much more expensive than AT&T's DSL service. It 
starts at about $50 a month for a download speed of 512 kilobits per 
second, and for 1.5Mbps downloads the price is $80 a month. By contrast, 
AT&T currently offers a promotional price on its 1.5Mbps service of 
$12.99 for the first year of service.

Whitacre also said AT&T is testing wireless technology that could help 
rural customers get high-speed Internet access. Specifically, AT&T plans 
to deploy trials of fixed WiMax technology in Texas and Nevada. 
BellSouth, which will soon be acquired by AT&T, is already using WiMax 
in parts of Florida, Georgia, Louisiana and Mississippi.

WiMax is a radio frequency technology that promises to deliver two-way 
Internet access at speeds of up to 75Mbps. Its backers claim WiMax can 
transmit data up to 30 miles between broadcast towers and can blanket 
areas of more than a mile in radius


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