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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Moderated Thread - please read rules before posting
QCOM 178.28-1.7%3:59 PM EST

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To: foundation who wrote (7676)2/23/2001 8:18:08 AM
From: foundation  Read Replies (1) of 196951
 
Intel says telecoms industry facing "bankruptcy"

By Paul de Bendern

CANNES, France, Feb 23 (Reuters) - Intel Corp , the world's largest computer chip
maker, on Friday said the telecoms industry was heading for financial woes because of
its heavy spending on yet unproven next generation wireless technologies.

"We're facing a situation of where an industry is heading for bankruptcy...before even a
3G (third-generation mobile phone) call is made," Intel Vice-President and General
Manager Hans Geyer told delegates at the GSM World Congress.

Intel is quickly becoming one of the key suppliers of semiconductors to the wireless
telecom industry, selling processors and memory chips. Mobile telecom operators
including Vodafone , France Telecom , Deutsche Telekom and Telefonica last year
sank over $100 billion into new radio spectrum licences, also known as 3G licences.

Geyer said they were likely to spend a similar amount to buy networks to run these new
systems which are expected to deliver fast Internet services to mobile phones.

Geyer, attending the world's largest annual mobile phone trade show in Cannes, said
the industry should work on finding and building services and applications that
consumers would want and would buy.

Sales growth of mobile phones is levelling off to 20-25 percent annually from 50-60
percent levels in the last several years, which means operators can no longer grow their
way out of unprofitable business plans.

Geyer said the telecoms industry should learn from the personal computer market and
warned operators and wireless companies from trying to find a single so-called "killer
application," one which alone would justify the technology.

"The PC industry has not seen one 'killer application'," said Geyer, who made the
comments during a panel discussion which included executives from Psion , Siemens ,
Microsoft , and Handspring . The discussion came after Japan's Sony Corp and Psion
presented their visions of the wireless future.

"We shouldn't worry about whether Sony's (or other companies) vision is the right one,"
Geyer said. "It doesn't matter which vision is the right one... users will decide what they
want. I can't predict what they will want."

"The focus should...be on the current technologies and what can be done with them,"
said Joe Sipher, vice-president of product marketing at handheld device maker
Handspring.

"I'm worried that the focus is too much on future technologies and what they will be able
to do," he said.
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