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This profile was automatically generated using 7 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 7 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Employment History
View...View all 7 references Web References
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1. Slowing Into High Speed
www.teledotcom.com/article/TEL - [Cached]Published on: 6/3/2004 Last Visited: 6/3/2004
"No one anticipated the volume of requests for [consumer] high-speed connections to the Internet," says Ron Anderson, vice president for operations at Hart.
For all their caution, even the incumbents realize they shouldn't complain about the potential for surging demand. "The ability to deliver video entertainment services over copper wires should certainly accelerate the growth and popularity of xDSL products and services," says Anderson. -
2. mPhase Completes Installation of Beta mPhaseTV+ Platform
www.mphasetech.com/pr/061703.h - [Cached]Published on: 6/17/2003 Last Visited: 1/8/2007
"Today DSL service must include broadcasting television - along, of course, with high-speed data and voice," stated Ron Anderson, Vice President of Hart Telephone. -
3. Xchange Magazine - Back Office - Balancing Act
www.soundingboardmag.com/artic - [Cached]Last Visited: 6/7/2002
"Our plan is to roll this product out just as fast as the supplier can have it manufactured and we can get it installed," says Ron Anderson, executive vice president at Hart Telephone, where a test of mPhase's system has been under way for several months. "The people here who have seen this system in operation are very excited about it."
Hart, like many small independents, runs a cable system, which it must either upgrade to remain competitive with the other local cable operator, Comcast Corp. (http://www.comcast.com/), or replace using the mPhase platform. "We'll offer the [mPhase-based] service everywhere, which means we'll be competing with ourselves as well as Comcast," Anderson says. While many observers believe ADSL will never be able to deliver services that can compete with cable, the issue of whether or not the DSL-based video quality measures up appears to be going away.

