SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Dell Technologies Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: SecularBull who wrote (133208)6/17/1999 11:28:00 AM
From: arthur pritchard  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176387
 
VITAMIN MF SUPPLEMENT

Symbol Money Flow Net Chg. % Last
AOL 177,115,326 +6.34 113 1/4
LU 100,605,763 +.71 61 15/16
QQQ 87,230,532 +1.57 110 1/8
MSFT 82,403,345 +2.31 82 7/8
DELL 50,910,379 +1.92 36 1/2
AMZN 34,948,399 +5.88 118 1/4
DIS 33,511,052 +2.34 30 1/16
CSCO 30,813,370 +1.34 117 13/16
NOK 28,813,233 +.07 84 1/16
ATHM 26,635,673 +13.65 53 27/32
GE 24,526,165 +.41 107 1/4
ORCL 24,020,669 +4.36 34 3/8
PG 23,363,952 +2.76 88 7/16
EMC 19,586,590 +.47 54
NOVL 18,265,083 +1.01 25
IBM 16,867,858 -.47 120 1/8
ALD 14,834,776 +.00 64 15/16
INTC 12,488,128 -3.14 57 13/16
EGRP 12,245,933 +1.84 36 9/32
NITE 11,391,721 +4.70 54 5/16
DCLK 9,954,605 +4.68 90 15/16
SUNW 9,161,541 +.60 62 7/16
GM 8,382,644 +.78 64 15/16
LCOS 7,747,828 +6.37 87 11/16
RNWK 6,743,478 +6.79 64 7/8
CMGI 5,400,405 +11.74 104 1/16
T 4,192,358 +.23 54 7/16
MMM 4,104,021 -.21 90 5/8
LOR 3,688,644 +.37 17 1/16
QCOM 3,261,567 -1.11 117 1/8
KO 2,752,060 +.20 64
EK 2,606,648 +.44 71 9/16
FDX 2,331,532 -.83 52 3/16
MSGI 2,124,135 +27.87 24 3/8
MRK 1,622,572 -.09 68 9/16
RTRSY 1,483,400 +1.06 83 1/4
POS 1,431,866 -.33 95 3/4
AA 1,205,147 +2.21 66 3/8
PCNTF 1,183,468 +6.83 43
SPYG 553,887 +1.48 17 1/8
EPAY 413,991 +1.38 36 5/8
ZDZ 397,462 +.00 18 3/16
CBS 321,083 +1.05 42 1/16
CNF 301,676 +1.47 38 7/8
RMBS 279,222 +.72 87 1/8
BWEB 217,649 +.70 18
ZSUN 153,509 +.00 7.15620
NETS 145,540 +4.00 13
IIXL 140,946 +.00 15 1/2
IMOT 23,419 +2.48 3.87500
USPL 13,736 +3.28 7 7/8
IINT -9,519 +.78 4 1/32
NETD -15,561 -4.17 4.31250
XNET -17, 1.22 2.53120
TNRG -32,952 +4.00 .2600
MCNS -78,945 -.51 12 5/16
BRCM -220,530 -.44 113
NETP -325,216 +7.14 17 13/16
AWRE -507,107 +2.35 43 1/2
ADBE -547,986 -.34 73 3/4
WIND -803,842 +1.74 18 1/4
MO -1,214,209 -1.47 41 13/16
WMT -1,740,449 -.14 44 5/16
GNET -1,972,238 +7.83 124
CHV -3,465,940 -1.44 94 7/16
WCOM -3,478,012 +.37 92 25/32
SCH -6,130,225 +1.40 90 3/8
YHOO -8,607,791 +5.16 148 15/16
HWP -12,507,698 -2.27 88 11/16



To: SecularBull who wrote (133208)6/21/1999 2:45:00 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 176387
 
LoD: FYI...PUT YOUR MONEY ON DSL, SAYS CISCO'S CEO:

<<Cisco's Chambers describes 'next wave' of wired economy
By John Rendleman, PC Week Online
June 10, 1999 12:38 PM ET

ATLANTA -- With businesses already starting to reap the benefits of high-speed data and Internet services, the next group poised to leap into the wired digital economy will be consumers, according to Cisco Systems Inc. President and CEO John Chambers.

In the adoption of networking technologies, especially IP-based services, "the next wave will be consumer, [and] for the home you're talking about how do you get bandwidth there at a reasonable price," Chambers said in a keynote speech here Wednesday night at the Supercomm '99 show.

In future network architectures, the dominant network application protocol will be IP, with an underlying transport layer of ATM (asynchronous transfer mode) technology or pure optical transport of IP directly across optical circuits, Chambers said.

"It's going to be an IP/ATM world," he predicted. "Circuit switched is dead, and it's just a matter of how quickly convergence takes over" in various parts of the world.

With advances in network technology, bandwidth at the core optical transport layer will become a commodity, with value-added services residing at the switching layer and an all-IP protocol at the user layer, Chambers said.

Put your money on DSL

As to whether DSL (digital subscriber line), wireless or cable TV networks will become the access networks of choice, "many people say cable will win, but I don't buy that at all," said Chambers, who predicted DSL will prevail, followed possibly by emerging wireless data services.

Easing into a familiar theme, Chambers said the growth of the Internet and other high-speed networking services will also cause a fundamental shift in the nation's economy as corporations learn that conventional competitive advantages such as physical size and number of workers no longer carry as much weight.

"The key message I'm sharing with you is that you must build a network infrastructure to allow you to share information internally and externally," he said. "Unless you're giving your employees access to information or your customers access to information, you're not [helping them] make decisions."

As examples of Cisco's own adoption of a networked approach to business, Chambers said the San Jose, Calif., company now conducts 80 percent of its customer support using Web-based applications and expects within a couple of years to be conducting $30 billion to $40 billion a year in business-to-business e-commerce.

Chambers also demonstrated the Cisco Communications System Ethernet-based phone, which the company is now adopting internally. The technology, obtained through Cisco's acquisition last year of Selsius Systems Inc., enables the phone to be plugged into a standard Ethernet jack and automatically configured using a consistent telephone extension number.

The phones are also tied in with an intranet application that uses Cisco directory technology to let a user click on an extension to dial another user via a Web browser. In addition, the phones are connected to an internal unified messaging application that provides a graphical interface to users' voice- and e-mail.>>