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Technology Stocks : Applied Materials No-Politics Thread (AMAT)
AMAT 252.31+1.0%12:59 PM EST

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To: robert b furman who wrote (299)11/6/2001 8:24:00 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) of 25522
 
Hi Bob,

Sorry to hear about your teeth troubles......if you get rich enough with tech stocks you can always hire someone to chew the food for you. Outsource it:-)

AMAT reports one week from tomorrow; about one week before Thanksgiving. Hopefully there will be good news coming out of Santa Clara with regards to guidance. At this point, anything not sequentially lower is good news so the bar is not too high for them<ggg>

Speaking of outsourcing Investment spending, INTC has a "Three I" strategy with regards to Investment spending:

Intel to invest $25 mln for Indian R&D unit
BANGALORE, Nov 6 (Reuters) - Intel Corp plans to invest $25 million to set up a new technology development centre in India's technology capital of Bangalore and expand its engineering staff by 60 percent to about 800 by mid-2002, a top company official said.

``We see value in using the engineering resources available in India,'' Avtar Saini, Intel's director for South Asia told Reuters by electronic mail. ``It's a long-term strategic direction for the company.''

Intel, which currently employs 500 engineers in six different locations at Bangalore, plans to consolidate the majority of its activities in the new building, Saini said.

Despite the worst slump so far in the semiconductor market, the world's No. 1 chipmaker has stuck to its aggressive global spending plans.

Staff at the Bangalore centre, which is Intel's largest non-manufacturing site in Asia, work on applications and technologies for e-business and develop software and hardware for networking and communications.

Intel has in the last few years taken advantage of India's vast army of cost-efficient English-speaking software workers to scale up its operations in the country.

Intel's president Craig Barrett said earlier this year that his company saw Ireland, Israel and India as hotbeds for new technology, referred to by Intel as its ``three Is'' investment strategy.

Regards,

Brian
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