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Turtlebrain,
>> whatever earnings outside vendors actually have serving that market, it will all be over in two years. <<
Yeah right. It'll all be fixed, fine and dandy by y2k. And I'm a virgin.
>> So how much should one pay for two years of good earnings? << >> a few of them have outside businesses <<
Sure bud, and everyone said Microsoft will never fly, 'cause they just had Dos.
Ever heard of mergers and acquisitions? Guess not.
Oh, and by the way, Mr Huge IQ, here is my last "spam", just in case you're too smart to read my stupid posts, and missed it:
Industry execs grapple with fallout of Year 2000
By Lisa DiCarlo, PC Week Online
Excerpts from www8.zdnet.com :
October 6, 1997 6:00 PM ET
Large corporations are spending roughly 20 percent of their IT budgets on the Year 2000 issue and, as a result,are putting application development and other projects on the back burner.
At a morning panel, Dell Computer Corp. CEO Michael Dell,PeopleSoft Inc. President, Chairman and CEO Dave Duffield, and Sybase Inc. CEO Mitchell Kertzman addressed the ripple effect the finding would have on their business.
"The [spending] boom is gone because of Year 2000 spending,'' said Duffield. "And that could result in a major slowdown of deployments.''
Think about it - I did, and as you know, I have the IQ of a turtle:
If they're spending 20% now, and most of the work has to be done between now and y2k, ae the earnings of y2k companies about to go down? Hmmmm?
I know, you'll come back with some bla bla bla, 'cause whatever the industry execs have to say is just plain giberish, and you know better, right?
Cheerios,
Off to make some bucks,
Bounced Czech (IQ -235) |
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