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Vincent Padois, head tutor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University who teaches robotics and is babysitting the Paris ICub, makes a demonstration with ICub robot, a ?hybrid embodied cognitive system for a humanoid robot" about 1 metre (3.2 feet) high, at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris September 4, 2009. Six versions of ICub exist in laboratories across Europe, where scientists are painstakingly tweaking its electronic brain to make it capable of learning, just like a human child and hoping it will learn how to adapt its behaviour to changing circumstances, offering new insights into the development of human consciousness.   REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

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    AT&T to stop selling DirecTV service

    NEW YORK
    Tue Dec 11, 2007 6:15pm EST

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    NEW YORK (Reuters) - AT&T Inc (T.N) said on Tuesday it will stop selling satellite television services from DirecTV Group Inc (DTV.O) in the first quarter in a sign the phone company may favor EchoStar Communications Corp (DISH.O) as its sole satellite partner.

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    Still, AT&T Chief Financial Officer Rick Lindner told Reuters separately that the company has not made a final decision on the matter and could take until the second half of 2008 to decide.

    AT&T has a marketing partnership with EchoStar in some markets and with DirecTV in others, and the phone company is also expanding its own video service called U-verse, which is delivered over high-speed fiber optic cables.

    The company said it would stop offering DirecTV's services to phone customers in the first quarter, while its current agreement with EchoStar extends until the end of 2008.

    DirecTV had no immediate comment, and EchoStar could not be reached immediately.

    Bernstein analyst Craig Moffett said it was likely that EchoStar would be AT&T's sole partner.

    "It would be awfully difficult at the end of 2008 to suddenly reverse course," said Moffett, adding that a reversal to DirecTV would give training and billing headaches to AT&T staff.

    DirecTV shares closed down 79 cents, or 3.3 percent, at $23.54 on Nasdaq, where EchoStar finished off $1.25, or 3 percent, at $38.83.

    Many analysts had expected AT&T to chose EchoStar over DirecTV -- the satellite partner of BellSouth, which AT&T bought late last year -- because the phone company has a more involved technology relationship with EchoStar.

    But Lehman Bros analyst Vijay Jayant said in a research note that Tuesday's news could be a slight positive for DirecTV since the phone company is postponing making a decision until late 2008, compared to expectations of a decision this year.

    Jayant estimated that DirecTV depends on AT&T for up to 9 percent of its gross subscriber additions, while EchoStar depends on AT&T for 16 percent of its gross additions.

    Moffett pegged the DirecTV dependency on AT&T at above 10 percent and said that it would likely see a drop-off in subscriber growth as a result of the AT&T move.

    "It could certainly dent (DirecTV's) subscriber growth costing them a distribution partner. Alternatively, they could throw money at the region and try to sustain growth," Moffett said. "That comes at a cost."

    AT&T's Lindner said the company has yet to decide if it will have one or two satellite partners, but that it favored an eventual partnership with just one. He said AT&T is in talks with both companies.

    "We want to make sure we have the best long-term answer to our customers and the best economics from the commercial agreement that fairly represents the distribution channel," Lindner said.

    He said there was no reason to make a decision yet.

    "The time frame I think for making a decision on a new long-term contract is probably pushed off until sometime in 2008, maybe even the second half of 2008," Lindner said.

    AT&T's decision, announced on Tuesday, to expand its own U-verse video network to 30 million homes by 2010 from its 17 million target for the end of 2008, further complicates the relationship with both satellite companies, Moffett said.

    "It highlights this kind of uncomfortable truth between the satellite operators and the telephone companies as the telephone companies shift to being competitors from distributors," Moffett said.

    (Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)



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