AOL, @Home battle speeds up.
Published:
13 July 1999 y., Tuesday
The fight between America Online Inc. and Redwood City-based Excite@Home Corp. is escalating, as some cable TV companies start to offer AOL customers big discounts if they sign up for Excite@Home_s high-speed Internet service. AT&T Corp. plans to offer AOL subscribers up to six months of free AOL service if they sign up for TCI@Home, AT&T_s high-speed Internet link. The service is offered over selected Tele-Communications Inc. cable networks that AT&T acquired earlier this year. Sixteen Bay Area communities -- 14 in the East Bay plus Marin and Petaluma -- are included in the offer, which is expected to reach nearly 400,000 AOL subscribers. AOL won_t have a high-speed service of its own for at least a few more months, so it can_t respond in kind to Excite@Home_s pitch. AOL, which declined to comment on AT&T_s move, has been pressing local, state and federal officials to open the cable networks, fueling an increasingly bitter battle with Excite@Home and the cable operators. The offer works this way: AOL customers who sign up for TCI@Home service by Aug. 31 will receive a monthly credit of $9.95 through the end of the year. AOL normally charges $21.95 per month but cuts its rate to $9.95 for subscribers who use a competing Internet provider to connect to AOL_s network. The TCI@Home service costs $39 per month. As part of the offer, AT&T is waiving its installation charge and promising to refund the first month_s fee if a user isn_t satisfied within 30 days.
Šaltinis:
Mercury News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
A new smartphone from Samsung has been announced by Three in Sweden, the Samsung Galaxy Z.
more »
News Corporation has sold its ailing social networking site MySpace to online advertising firm Specific Media.
more »
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer promoted company‘s new cloud product Office 365at an event in New York City.
more »
Most folks do work with their hands, but what about your feet?
more »
Company Double Research & Development has developed a new input device that can sense motion and pressure of the fingers. Manipulator "amenbo" find its use in applications requiring detection of users using their hands.
more »
Thousands of pages from one of the world's biggest collections of historic books, pamphlets and periodicals are to be made available on the internet.
more »
Chinese internet giant Alibaba has announced that it is reorganizing one of its websites, Taobao, into three separate units.
more »
Mr Lockhart, who joins Facebook next month as Vice President of Global Communications, represents the company's latest move to enlist Washington insiders.
more »
Facebook is planning an IPO that could value the company at as much as $100 billion, according to CNBC sources.
more »
Audi and MIT's SENSEable City Lab have teamed up to design the car navigation system of the future - a 3D display that will sit on the dashboard.
more »