Network Computer Incorporated clinched another customer for its software
for Internet set-top box devices, and, again, the deal takes place
overseas.
Network Computer (NCI) inked a deal with
NEC's Big Globe Internet service to
supply software for devices that display Web pages on TV's.
Big Globe, an internet service
owned by the Japanese conglomerate NEC, has about three million customers,
NCI said, making it one of the highest-profile deals NCI has struck yet.
Like previous deals for NCI, Japanese consumers are the focus.
Earlier this year, NCI snared four
other Japanese
telecommunication companies with a combined customer base of
approximately 13 million Japanese households. NCI's hardware partnerships
are also based largely in Japan.
The company continues to seek a deal in the U.S. that will
validate the company's strategy.
Sources
previously told CNET News.com that a
deal is in the works with
America Online to provide the online giant
with technology for a new Internet set-top box.
AOL will use the technology to expand its services to television users
through the launch of AOL TV, a service that would rival Microsoft's WebTV. A deal has yet to be
formally announced, though, and NCI executives declined to comment on the
subject.
Attempts to date to sell set-top boxes powered by NCI software in the U.S.
have largely fallen flat. NCI, for its part, remains confident that its
approach to selling software to companies is working. Competitor WebTV so far leads the domestic market in
providing software that allows users to surf the Internet via a TV set-top
box.
"[NEC Big Globe] is the No. 1 provider of ISP services in
Japan, so for them to adopt [our technology] speaks well to the
business model we've been going after in the last year," said David
Limp, vice president of marketing for NCI. The company does claim NEC as an
investor, along with Oracle and 3Com.
NEC will deploy the new service in 1999. NCI said that 20,000 units with
its software have already shipped in Japan through previously announced
partners. The set-top boxes will be supplied by Acer and Soltec and distributed through NEC
to customers.
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