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To: Susan Saline who wrote (18276)7/29/1999 5:11:00 PM
From: BoNg-N-BoNg  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 43080
 
OSX stocks - Sue, I think there's 2-3 days left being bullish since as usual a profit taking w/ take place on mon. or tues. before another API reports..interesting how OSX index will retest its resist. again..there's a heat wave going on much of the U.S..that could help.. I'm looking to reenter long on PTEN & UTI on friday..if they open strong in the morning, 11:30 to 12:30 is the time they usually hit their low of the day..

just me...
eL...



To: Susan Saline who wrote (18276)7/29/1999 6:34:00 PM
From: AlienTech  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 43080
 
Web players win big in hosting business
By John Borland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
July 29, 1999, 12:50 p.m. PT

There's gold in the Web hosting hills, and ambitious companies are investing
hundreds of millions of dollars to make sure they're leading the prospecting pack.

The market is driven by the race to get online--and the inability of most large companies to
maintain the equipment needed to support a sophisticated Web site on their own
premises. A booming market has thus emerged for companies willing to build "data
centers" that host and maintain the equipment and networks that bring top-level Web sites
like Yahoo to the average user.

The market is still small, averaging about $2 billion in business this year, according to
Forrester Research. But by the end of 2003, the market is expected to be worth $14.6
billion.

That's a big financial carrot dangling at the end of a short string, and all the industry's
players are scrambling to make sure they get a bite.

MCI WorldCom, which has trailed other large players in the
industry, is the latest to announce grand expansion plans.
Its UUNet division will invest $100 billion to expand its
hosting business by the end of this year--effectively doubling
its hosting capacity, company officials said.

But competitors are also building out quickly. Qwest
Communications International said today it had opened two
new data centers in California, and would continue to build
more centers around the United States this year.

Frontier Communications' GlobalCenter is in the process of
building five new data centers across the country, and is
looking at expanding overseas as the company's merger with Global Crossing is
completed.

Even Intel, the leading PC microchip manufacturer, announced recently that it would throw
its hat into the hosting ring.

Pure hosting companies like Exodus Communications have seen their stock valuation as
much as quadruple this year as Wall Street has recognized
the demand for web hosting services. Underscoring the
demand, Frontier's GlobalCenter was reportedly one of the
most desirable pieces in a recent bidding war between Qwest
and Global Crossing, executives in those companies have
said.

But even with all of this investment, the leading players are
having a difficult time keeping up with the demands for
hosting space, bandwidth, and new services, analysts said.

"This is a very immature industry today," said Jeanne Schaaf,
an industry analyst with Forrester Research. "They're all
building out data centers with a vengeance."

But even as these companies sink huge amounts of money
into building storage and network capacities, the character of
the market is changing.

Early in the game, companies focused heavily on farming out
their e-commerce sites and basic Web hosting duties. This
niche is evolving as Web sites become more complicated,
and offer more catalog, database, and application services,
the hosting companies say.

UUNet's Mitch Ferro, who heads the company's hosting
division, said two-thirds of existing customers use the
relatively simple e-commerce and basic hosting functions, but a majority of new
businesses are now seeking much more complicated services.

Even more critical, analysts say, is the growing need for Web hosting data centers to be
just one part of a full telecommunications infrastructure, to provide the bandwidth that the
customers need to send their data to users.

"They need to be part and parcel of a network," Shaaf said. "Data vendors without networks
are not going to be well positioned in this market."

Ferro confirmed that customers are increasingly asking for bandwidth requirements along
with their basic hosting needs. "I think that will be more and more important in the future,"
he said. "We are seeing customers ask for gobs of bandwidth."

That development could bode ill for some newcomers like Intel, which does not have its own proprietary network, some analysts say.