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To: richard surckla who wrote (29257)9/11/1999 2:43:00 AM
From: richard surckla  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93625
 
Dataquest Predicts: Intel puts its money behind Rambus

Index

Tue, 08 Jun 1999 11:25:38 GMT
Jane Wakefield

The technology road map for DRAM manufacturers will be dictated by Intel and Rambus technology,
according to leading chip analysts.

Speaking at Dataquest's Predicts '99 conference in Paris, senior Dataquest analyst Richard Gordon
foresees a revolution in DRAM technology and with Intel putting its money behind Direct Rambus
technology, he believes 60 percent of total DRAM shipments will be Rambus by 2002.

"Rambus is the only technology available that will get its [Intel] microprocessors to market," Gordon
said.

He remains optimistic about the near future of the DRAM market, predicting a revenue peak of $43bn
(œ27bn) in 2001, although this will be followed by another price crash in 2002.

"Manufacturers must assume that the boom/bust cycle is here to stay and that supply and demand are
never in balance for long," he said.

Gordon believes Siemen's sell-off of Infineon will be positive and keep the semiconductor company in
the top 5 manufacturers. Two months ago, Siemens spun off its semiconductor division in order to float
Infineon Technologies on the stock market. According to Siemens, Infineon is the world's 10th largest
semiconductor manufacturer by size.

Samsung, Micron and NEC will continue to dominate the market, although Gordon predicts Taiwanese
manufacturers "could hit the market at boom and will be one to watch".

Not everyone will be winners in the volatile DRAM industry, however. With Motorola quitting the
market in 1997, Gordon is predicting "another Japanese vendor may exit this year". With Fujitsu at the
bottom of the top ten -- with only 4.6 percent market share -- industry watchers will be asking
questions about how long the semiconductor firm can last.



To: richard surckla who wrote (29257)9/11/1999 4:59:00 PM
From: gnuman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 93625
 
re: new ATHLON machine and where I/we can buy one.
In Northern VA both Best Buy and Circuit City have ad's for Athlon's from IBM and Compaq.