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will firmly establish Comcast as the 3rd cable TV operator.

44. 18-Nov-99: ?The Search Continues

for a Single Wireless Standard? ? There are currently a half-dozen standards

in place for wireless service from Global System for Mobile Communications

to Time Division Multiple Access. Right now the force seems to be

a convergence between GSM & TDMA, creating a dominant standard.

None-the-less, giants like Sprint & Bell Atlantic favor Code Division

Multiple Access.

45. 19-Nov-99: ?Privacy Concerns

Rise As Plans for Tracking Cell Phone Users Unfold? ? The FCC has mandated

that all wireless providers be able to pinpoint the location of a wireless

911 call within 100 feet by October 2001. Also, recently the agency

mandated that wireless providers be able to provide the beginning and ending

location of a phone call to law enforcement officials.

46. 22-Nov-99: ?Deal Would Give Vodafone

a Leg Up in A Heated Race? ? Vodafone announced a bid for Mannesmann AG,

in an attempt to build the first pan-European wireless network. This

would be a major benefit for Vodafone in being able to offer flat rate

plan over the entire European coverage area.

47. 22-Nov-99: ?Cabletron to Sell

Unit for Stock of $860 Million? ? In an effort to regain focus on high-end

networking hardware, Cabletron has agreed to sell an Internet equipment

business to Efficient Networks. Cabletron is shedding non-core businesses

in an attempt to make itself a viable takeover target. Efficient

Networks, which makes DSL modems, bought FlowPoint, which makes DSL routers.

48. 22-Nov-99: ?AT&T Expects

Delays In Closing MediaOne Deal? ? AT&T and MediaOne most likely will

not finalize their proposed deal until the second quarter of 2000.

The delay is largely due to a lengthy regulatory review by the Department

of Justice. The deal, which is none-the-less expected to go through,

will make AT&T into the nations? largest cable TV service provider.

49. 23-Nov-99: ?Nextel Sets a Deal

to Buy Phones from Kyocera? ? In a move marking the first time Nextel has

bought phones from a third party other than Motorola, Kyocera has agreed

to provide the next generation of phones for Nextel. Kyocera has

been a leader in wireless technology, and recently unveiled a phone designed

to receive streaming video.

50. 26-Nov-99: ?Court Overturns Ruling

on NextWave, Spelling Good News for FCC?s Valuation? ? An appeals court

overturned a bankruptcy ruling that valued NextWave Personal Communications

at $1.02 billion, less than a quarter the price it had bid. The ruling

marked a victory for the FCC which is hoping to reclaim billions of dollars

for spectrum licenses. The move also spelled good news for Nextel,

which is hoping to buy the troubled NextWave for $6 billion.

The Future of Telecommuters

The Future of Telecommuters

As the our global network known as the

Internet increases its size and speed, the future of telecommuting becomes

more and more promising. Generally speaking, telecommuting is defined

as spending at least one day out of a five day work week working in one?s

home. In a growing number of companies, traditional office space

is giving way to home offices, living rooms and even kitchens as employees

work from home, from their cars or virtually anywhere. Until recently,

technology was the main barrier to telecommuting. Now the biggest hurdles

are cultural, organizational and managerial. Those organizations that have

introduced well designed and supported home-working schemes have benefited

from lower costs, higher productivity, greater flexibility and a more motivated

workforce.

Both companies and employees are discovering

the benefits of virtual workspaces. Businesses that successfully incorporate

them will be able to significantly cut their overhead costs. It would cost

much less to have a few people answering phones at home at 3 o’clock in

the morning than running a skeleton crew in a heated/air-conditioned, lighted,

and such office building. The employer can offer telecommuting as

an option for prospective employees to improve recruitment. As an

added bonus, companies heighten their public image as environmentally conscious

by saving some ozone by curtailing traffic and commuters. They?re also

finding that by being flexible, they?re more responsive to customers, while

retaining key personnel whom otherwise might be lost to a spouse?s transfer

or a new child. Left to generally work on their own terms, employees most

often are happier, as well as more creative and productive.

How are employees likely to benefit? That

depends mostly to which particular employee we are referring. Telecommuting

allows someone with a physical handicap that could not actually commute

to the workplace to still function as a valuable employee. It would allow

someone who has small children and feels a great need to be home for them

to still work and have a career. The distance an employee must travel daily

to work is a factor that can induce great amounts of frustration and expense

in one?s life. Telecommuting can alleviate this stress. And, employees

who successfully embrace the concept are better able to manage their work

and personal lives. Allowing greater freedom and bestowing greater responsibility

can enhance job satisfaction. However, employees should be aware of some

of the pitfalls of telecommuting as well as the benefits. It is estimated

that telecommuters earn less overall then office workers.

Managers often fear that employees will

not get enough work done if they can?t see them. Most veterans of the virtual

office, however, maintain that the exact opposite is true. All too often,

employees wind up fielding phone calls in the evening or stacking an extra

hour or two on top of an eight-hour day. Not surprisingly, that can create

an array of problems, including burnout, errors and marital conflict.

Another potential problem with which virtual employees must deal is handling

all the distractions that can occur at home. As a result, many firms will

provide workers with specific guidelines for handling work at home. The

majority of workers will adjust and become highly productive in an alternative

office environment. The most important thing for a company to do is to

give suggestions that will help workers adapt.

This new work environment is designed around

the concept that one?s best thinking isn?t necessarily done at a desk or

in an office. Sometimes, it?s done in a conference room with several people.

Other times it?s done on a ski slope or driving to a client?s office. The

idea is to eliminate the boundaries about where people are supposed to

think, to create an environment that is stimulating and rich in resources.

Employees decide on their own where they will work each day, and are judged

on work produced rather than on hours put in at the office. Because workers

aren?t in the same place every day, they may be exposed to a wider range

of people and situations. And that can open their eyes and minds to new

ideas and concepts.

Technology is obviously the driving force

behind the shift to telecommuting. Technology can be relatively straightforward

- a good PC with licensed office software and a modem or DSL connection

to the central systems. These must in turn be designed to enable remote

working – for example database applications should use client-server techniques

to minimize workstation bandwidth requirements. For many home-workers a

combination of email, file-transfer and intranet/internet access is sufficient.

Some Internet service providers are offering secure gateway services into

corporate systems, an advantage being national and international access

for the price of a local call

A broad range of information and communications

technologies is beginning to enable better organizational effectiveness,

efficiency and customer service:

 High speed computer and phone

system networking allows staff to use any standard desktop, independently

of location – main office, other office, home or on-the-move

 Intranets (high speed internal

internets) are easy to implement and maintain and can offer simple, standard

interfaces to most corporate applications including legacy mainframe and

client-server systems

 Integrated desktop applications,

such as Microsoft Office, can streamline and automate a wide variety of

office tasks with minimal programming effort

 With computer-telephony integration

(CTI) the IT and phone systems (fixed and portable) can work in harmony

to deliver advanced messaging and call-center solutions

 The Internet is already widely

used in the technology sector for customer service and support – use will

extend to other sectors as networks improve and consumer and business usage

grows, especially with the advent of Internet-enabled televisions

 Document image processing

(DIP) and optical character recognition (OCR) support the elimination of

paper and streamline associated processes, for example by scanning incoming

mail and other documents.

Companies maintain links with the mobile

work force in a variety of ways. Employees access their E-mail and voicemail

daily; important messages and policy updates are broadcast regularly into

the mailboxes of thousands of workers. When the need for teleconferencing

arises, it can put hundreds of employees on the line simultaneously. Typically,

the organization?s mobile workers link from cars, home offices, hotels,

even airplanes. Virtual workers are only a phone call away. Certainly,

telephony has become, and will continue to be a powerful driver in the

virtual-office boom. Satellites and high-tech telephone systems, such as

DSL lines, allow companies to zoom data from one location to another at

light speed. Organizations will link to their work force and hold virtual

meetings using tools such as video-conferencing.

The trend is being bolstered by growing

corporate acceptance of the workstyle and a recognition by employers that

it is mutually beneficial for them and their employees. The strong

economy coupled with high employment rates has created a positive environment

for alternative workstyles and has prompted employers to use the telecommuting

option to lure highly sought-after, skilled employees.

Joanne Pratt, president of Joanne H. Pratt

Associates cited three factors that are driving the growth of telecommuting:

 Internet growth

The Internet has created a demand for

PCs and provided an incentive to set up a home office.

 Technology has reached a

critical mass

Cell phones, notebook computers and other

technologies have resulted in the workforce that is equipped to work anywhere.

 Work/life balance

Employees are paying attention to work/life

choices and even conditioning their acceptance of new jobs on pre-approval

to telecommuting.

In its first major study of telecommuting

in two years, FIND/SVP reports 11 million Americans now telecommute to

the office. That’s a 30% jump from two years ago and a 175% leap from 1990.

FIND/SVP expects U.S. telecommuting to swell another 3 million by the year

2001. Another research company, The Yankee Group, agrees the telecommuting

workforce is growing at a brisk clip (18% per year). The American Management

Association forecasts a 171% growth in telecommuting over the next five

years. The rapid technology adoption was also noticed by the FIND/SVP survey,

which discovered that an estimated 31 percent of telecommuters use the

Internet, more than double the average rate for home users, and 75 percent

of telecommuters use personal computers.

Looking ahead, it’s just a simple matter

of mathematics. Computer and networking equipment is getting better and

cheaper. Office space is getting more expensive. Highway traffic is becoming

more congested. It’s only a matter of time until home workers become as

numerous as office workers. Eventually, this will mean that IT departments

have to become as adept at supporting these remote workers as they are

at supporting LAN-based users in company offices. Keeping a fleet of temperamental

laptop computers up and running is part of the headache. Keeping the connection

to the Internet up 24-by-7 will also loom large, as will volume purchases

of personal fax machines and printers.

Society is on the frontier of a fundamental

change in the way the workplace is viewed and how work is handled. In the

future, it will become increasingly difficult for traditional companies

to compete against those embracing the virtual office. Clearly, many considerations

must factor into a decision by a company to implement a telecommuting program.

However, companies that embrace the concept are sending out a loud message.

They?re making it clear that they?re interested in their employees? welfare,

that they?re seeking a competitive edge, and that they aren?t afraid to

rethink their work force for changing conditions. Those are the ingredients

for future success.