Hi Rick.
Yep, I still have my some of my stake in AXC. In case you folks don't know, Rick Kunz is the last man to trade AMPX on the pink sheets on the day that AXC moved over to the ASE.
Rick, it's interesting that you are arguing about IOMEGA and AXC, because if keepered media does live up to its billing, it definitely has a place in the product evolution of not only IOMEGA but also SYQUEST as well.
The ZIP disk is basically a super floppy (flexible media that becomes rigid at a certain spin rate accounting for the 100mb capacity). The JAZ disk and the media used by all of Syquest's drives, on the other hand, are essentially rigid media that functions in much the same way as the media in the traditional Winchester drives. It would seem to be a fair assumption to make that the perfected keeper layer could also be applied to the rigid media to increase the capacity of the disks.
AXC can sure use an annuity like those removable disks.
Regards,
Gus
P.S. The typical inductive film head production line operates with an average yield of between 80-90%. IBM, which has been producing MR heads since 1993, operates with a yield of around 65%. Quantum, which recently announced a new line of MR disk drives, is only getting between 15-45% yields. Source: Techweb .
The gap in manufacturing yields between the mature inductive film head production line and the MR head production line is a clear window of opportunity for AXC if keepered media is to become part of the evolution of the disk drive. How do you see AXC's chances of exploiting this opportunity?
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