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...indeed. While MCI's principal business strategy -- to beat AT&T -- is undiminished, the revolution in the wider world of telecommunications, coupled with the company's own success, has brought MCI to new battlegrounds and face- to-face with a greater array of competitors. The long-distance contender must now worry about cable-television operators, power utilities and 400 other rivals in addition to its longtime foes, AT&T and Sprint. In response, MCI has rounded up some powerful partners and launched a counteroffensive designed both to defend its turf and to expand well beyond it. In January, MCI announced...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: War of the Wireless | 3/14/1994 | See Source »

...hooking up with Nextel, MCI becomes an instant force in the emerging market for wireless communications. While wireless will not make up the backbone of the information superhighway, whose basic construction material remains fiber-optic or coaxial cable, portable phones, along with pagers and beepers, will be powerful extensions of the electronic network. Companies ranging from AT&T and Motorola to Time Warner and Bell South are racing to develop their own new portable-telephone systems, which will one day compete with existing cellular networks and traditional wall-jack phones. The wireless market is expected to increase sixfold...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: War of the Wireless | 3/14/1994 | See Source »

With Nextel and its other new partners, however, MCI joins the intense jockeying for position on the information highway. For many companies, the jam-up has had an unnerving effect. Last month's breakup of the planned Bell Atlantic-TCI merger came about after the two sides failed to agree on a purchase price. Last week Liberty Media, which is controlled by TCI chairman John Malone, said it wants to form an alliance with Blockbuster Entertainment in a deal that could threaten the already shaky Viacom-Paramount-Blockbuster merger. Another contender, Time Warner, announced that an expected spring start...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: War of the Wireless | 3/14/1994 | See Source »

...MCI's grand plan may not go altogether smoothly either. In Nextel, MCI is buying into promising but yet unproved technology. To rebuild the dispatch system, called specialized mobile radio, or SMR, into a communications network that can compete with cellular, Nextel and its partners will have to invest at least $1.8 billion. And even then there is no guarantee that SMR will be able to match or catch cellular, an already proved technology with about 13 million subscribers. In addition, cable and phone companies are developing so-called personal communications networks, or PCNS, a futuristic portable-phone service that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: War of the Wireless | 3/14/1994 | See Source »

...MCI had little choice. AT&T's $12.6 billion acquisition of McCaw Cellular Communications, which is still awaiting approval by regulators, put sufficient competitive pressure on MCI that it went out and found its own wireless partner. In an ironic twist, MCI exited the cellular-phone business eight years ago by selling its licenses to McCaw for $120 million. The company is also financially pressed to reduce the $5 billion in fees that it pays to the local Baby Bells for the right to connect to the local telephone network. A wireless system would allow MCI largely to bypass...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: War of the Wireless | 3/14/1994 | See Source »

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