We do have a limited launch in the Atlanta area and we are committed to bringing our U-verse products to other markets, AT&T Corporate Spokesman Joe Chandler said Friday.
Called the Consumer Choice for Television Act, Georgia House Bill 227 was signed into law last year. Under the law, beginning Jan. 1 companies have been able to apply for statewide video and cable franchises.
AT&Ts application, filed Jan. 2, became effective Feb. 14 and covers many of the states metro areas, including Dougherty, Baker, Mitchell and portions of Lee, Worth and Miller counties in Southwest Georgia.
U-verse can be delivered over AT&Ts existing infrastructure, where it exists or is upgraded, and through a single home telephone line a customer can purchase voice, high speed internet and video service, Chandler said.
The customers that have our product really like it, he said.
U-verse is already available in metro areas in California, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, Oklahoma, Texas and Wisconsin.
The service carries more high-definition channels, four DVR streams and so many things that make it different from tradition cable television, Chandler said.
Whats really amazing about it is the channel-changing speeds its instantaneous, he said.
Down the road, U-verse will stem from a single service box record TV that can be watched on any set in the house, he said.
Most local television channels will be included in the service, Chandler said.
The new law, lobbied for heavily by AT&T, allows a cable provider to request the same franchise terms a municipality has in place with another provider, in Albanys case, Mediacom, City Attorney Nathan Davis said.
The citys 10-year, non-exclusive franchise agreement guarantees Albany 5 percent of Mediacoms gross revenues and expires Nov. 9, 2011, Davis said.
The agreement has never prevented other cable providers from selling service in Albany, he said.
Dougherty Countys agreement with Mediacom expires April 30.