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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly?
MSFT 414.22+0.7%Feb 4 3:59 PM EST

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To: David Howe who wrote (69413)5/22/2002 11:11:45 PM
From: David Howe  Read Replies (1) of 74651
 
Haines did make a major mistake. He was so enraged with hate for Microsoft that he was practically foaming at the mouth. His sentences ran together and the subject matter got mixed from one rant to the next.

Much of his rant was false to begin with, but it became even less truthful when he got so excited that he combined points. An example was the 10% broadband adoption issue. He got so frantic to get this out that he got confused and stated that only 10% of US homes had access to broadband. That's a false statement. He probably meant to say that only 10% have it, but he was so intent on bashing Microsoft that he failed to even attempt one point at a time.

He hates MSFT so much that he was interrupting himself and was running FUD together with other FUD and getting the FUD confused. This caused him to make FALSE and MISLEADING statements. Isn't there a law against that? If not, there's certainly a reason to employ people that avoid making them.

His employers will hear about this and he has MANY employers. One of them might act.

Dave
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