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Politics : Idea Of The Day -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (27103)6/19/1999 5:30:00 AM
From: IQBAL LATIF  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 50167
 
Al---- just a link....http://www.clearstation.com/cgi-bin/details?Event=peek&Symbol=rmbs&Refer=http://www.clearstation.com/cgi-bin/purvey%3FEvent%3DGroup%26Param%3DNasdaq%26Ordering%3DVOL%26purv_id%3D3590%26at%3D1%26Refer%3D/cgi-bin/details%253FSymbol%253D_IIX.X%2526Section%253Dfront%2526Refer%253D/index.html
clearstation.com



To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (27103)6/19/1999 2:15:00 PM
From: GROUND ZERO™  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50167
 
I read on another thread that someone has been
short the SP's from 970.00 way back when, it's
difficult to imagine that anyone would hold such a
position for all this time.....BWDIK

GZ



To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (27103)6/22/1999 12:08:00 PM
From: IQBAL LATIF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50167
 
On drop of EMC...
Demand for data storage growing
Worldwide market seen hitting $12.5 billion by 2003

By Stephanie O'Brien, CBS MarketWatch
Last Update: 11:58 AM ET Jun 22, 1999 Market Snapshot
Bond Report

NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- Data storage is likely to dominate hardware budgets in the next several years, a Seagate Technology executive said Tuesday.


Today on CBS MarketWatch
Bonds pressure U.S. stocks
Lehman posts profit surprise
General Dynamics nabs GTE defense assets
European stocks slip on oil selloff
Musicland shows up at Web party
More top stories...
CBS MarketWatch Columns
Updated:
6/22/99 10:46:56 AM ET




The market for computer storage hardware is expected to be in the multi-billions in the next several years, Dave Aune, Seagate Technology's (SEG: news, msgs) executive director of storage systems technology, told an audience at PC Expo in New York on Tuesday.

Aune said he sees as much as 75 percent of the average hardware budget being set aside for data storage in the next several years. Right now, for each dollar a company spends on data storage hardware, it spends seven dollars to manage it. The goal is to bring that cost way down, Aune told CBS MarketWatch.

Attached systems

Aune said two types of data storage systems -- storage area networks and network attached storage systems -- are likely to dominate that market.

Storage area networks are more likely to be adopted by large organizations, while network attached storage systems may be more widely used by smaller businesses or companies that have satellite offices. They're also useful in offices that don't have their own information technology support staffs.

In an interview, Aune said worldwide sales of network attached storage hardware is seen hitting as much as $2.5 billion in 2002. Worldwide sales of storage area network hardware is expected to grow to $10 billion in 2003, he said.

Neither system is flawless, Aune said. Each has disadvantages when it comes to installation, operation and network security, he said.

A network attached system can sell for as little as $1,000, while a storage
area network can run from $75,000 at the low end to the multi-millions, depending on the needs and size of a given organization, Aune said.

Demand for greater storage capability is accelerating rapidly, Aune said.

That's good news for companies such as Veritas (VRTS: news, msgs) Legato (LGTO: news, msgs), Sun Microsystems (SUNW: news, msgs) and EMC (EMC: news, msgs), who make data storage products and are likely to benefit from healthy demand in the next several years.