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To: TREND1 who wrote (26261)6/10/1999 9:19:00 PM
From: Kenneth E. Phillipps  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 77400
 
Article of great interest to Cisco shareholders

This article states the IOS prevents Cisco from delivering carrier class products and Cisco is therefore re-writing the IOS - to be called IOSNG - Next Generation.

techweb.com



To: TREND1 who wrote (26261)6/11/1999 9:27:00 AM
From: TigerPaw  Respond to of 77400
 
OT "zip.exe" worm.
This has been the worst disruption I have seen. Not only were several people directly affected (not me - whew!) but it did lead to most people deleting any message, unread, from their mailbox that was a reply with an attachment. That of course led to much confusion over ongoing issues, which required face-to-face meetings to straighten out, with printed copies of everything. Productivity yesterday went to about 10% of normal. It's amazing how many side effects there were to those who never recived the actual virus.
- It makes me a little more worried about Y2K than I was yesterday.
TP (All machines have been force-fed anti-virus updates now)



To: TREND1 who wrote (26261)6/13/1999 6:13:00 PM
From: taxman  Respond to of 77400
 
> THE BULL MARKET REPORT WEEKLY, JUNE 13th, 1999
> Volume 19, #9w
> PART ONE

> $$$$$ CISCO FINANCES SURVEY - FINDS
> INTERNET BIGGER THAN EXPECTED
>
> The survey, performed by the University of
> Texas found that U.S. companies
> generated $301 billion in revenue last year
> from online-related goods and
> services. Sales by intermediaries, like stock
> trades and online travel agents,
> totaled $58 billion in 1998, the study found.
> Nearly half the total came from
> the hardware and software used to build the
> infrastructure of the Internet and
> electronic commerce. The study found $56
> billion was spent last year on
> software, consulting and training to provide
> Internet services and another $115
> billion was spent on hardware and software to
> run the lowest layers of the
> global computer network.
>
> Starting from almost no online commerce three
> years earlier, it was said that
> the growth rate is nothing short astounding.
> The study also estimated that 1.2
> million U.S. jobs were involved in Internet
> commerce. Lehman Brothers said the
> study demolished an assumption by many analysts
> that Internet sales were
> concentrated among a few big companies. What
> they found is that there are
> thousands of companies selling on the Internet
> which argues for continued
> growth. The figures also put the Internet
> portion of the economy on par with
> other more established sectors like automobiles
> and telecommunications. The
> conclusion: E-commerce has already achieved a
> status of great prominence in the
> U.S. economy
>

regards