CNBC is going to have a spot at 2:30 p.m. today on Cablevision's VoIP services. What's this have to do with any of the microcaps we follow?
PSOL has Time Warner cable as a customer for their VoIP product and they have another "unnamed Teir I Cable MSO customer". Since Cablevision and Time Warner are the only cable companies offering VoIP, I think Cablevision could be the other PSOL customer?
Here's a good post from RB:
By: TALLPAUL_30
05 May 2004, 03:35 PM EDT
Msg. 1018 of 1194
Jump to msg. #
Eureka, I have found it .... I think?
From C/Net News.Com, November, 2003 Publication
"Most U.S. cable providers are launching VoIP plans to challenge the telephone companies' stranglehold on the local and long-distance phone market. Cablevision is the second major U.S. cable provider to make a bigger commitment to VoIP in less than a month."
"In late October, Time Warner Cable announced plans to expand its "Digital Phone" service to four more cities."
"Meanwhile, the nation's top cable broadband providers, Cox Communications and Comcast, are still testing the technology, and both say they won't implement it until at least late next year."
It has to be Cablevision, since they announced their VOIP rollout in November, 2003.
Cox and Comcast are deferring until late 2004, or possibly later, plus Adelphia won't consider it while still in Chapter 11.
Their is no one left to qualify as "the other tier 1 Cable MSO", because they're the Big 5.
Cablevision is offering their VOIP service to 1,000,000 high-speed internet customers in the lucrative NYC Metro market.
It only gets better for the home-team.
TP
"Our houses are such unwieldy property that we are often imprisoned rather than housed in them." - Henry David Thoreau, Walden: Economy, 1854