A year and a half ago, cable took months. They had all kinds of installation problems, and poor coordination with their suppliers. |
Cell phones are very, very form-factor conscious. But this thing's a boat. |
DSL is a little more attractive to technical users because of its two-way upstream/downstream potential. |
Juno won't be directing the market, like AOL, but it can carve out its own niche. They are providing a service, nothing super-revolutionary, but they have a loyal group of users. [And] 4 million is nothing to sneeze at. |
Juno won't be directing the market, like AOL, but it can carve out its own niche. They are providing a service, nothing super-revolutionary, but they have a loyal group of users. [And] 4 million is nothing to sneeze at. |
Right now dial-up is the only game in town. There is not a big difference between AOL and the mom-and-pop ISP. |
Right now dial-up is the only game in town. There is not a big difference between AOL and the mom-and-pop ISP. |
Speed is never guaranteed. There's definitely high tide and low tide. |
The impact is for the long-term. Users will see more integration between content and distribution after the first year or two after the merger. |
The network shouldn't have to make much difference. It's going to happen. |
They must have had some really good stuff to smoke, because I don't see that happening. |
They will continue to grow. They won't be 8 million users by next year, but they will see decent growth. |
Up until recently AOL was not a big believer in broadband. They didn't have the cable access. Now, with Time Warner, they have access to all the cable outlets. |