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Technology Stocks : IATV-ACTV Digital Convergence Software-HyperTV -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sam who wrote (6601)9/15/1999 6:33:00 PM
From: Mike Fredericks  Respond to of 13157
 
Tudor also only has a fixed number of shares he/they can sell, so once they're gone, he/they can have no more negative affect (Unless he/they short, which is unlikely).

However, I think the Athiest posted a week maybe more ago saying that Tudor was buying. I questioned this and was told not to question when this person (I think it was Atheist but not 100% positive) stated that Tudor was buying. People were attributing part of the price rise to Tudor's resumed buying.

Mike's statement and Atheist's statement are not necessarily inconsistent... Tudor could have been buying, and now he could be selling having taken a 2-3 point (almost 25%) profit in the last few weeks.

I don't know. I'm not really worried either, because Tudor is just one entity and by himself cannot control the stock price for too long regardless of what he's doing. Bottom line is that whatever Tudor is doing, IATV is making good deals. Mike did allude to problems in his post (Samuels selling, threat of doing same again due to extraordinarily high number of stock options tied to market cap increase) but hopefully Samuels learned his lesson and the strength of the deals will be enough to overcome the option policy.

-Mike (who is much happier checking IATV stock prices 1 day a week and checking up on the thread every few days. Guess you guys are happier too without me around).



To: Sam who wrote (6601)9/16/1999 12:21:00 AM
From: art slott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13157
 
TV Channels on the Web
Television eyes the future of the Internet.

by Cameron Crouch, PC World
September 15, 1999, 6:30 p.m. PT

SAN FRANCISCO -- "The Internet is the third broadcasting revolution," says Robert Wussler, cofounder of CNN, former president of CBS TV, and current chair of two Internet ventures.

The television veteran spoke of the Internet's role as a broadcast medium at the Internet Content Conference here Wednesday. He reflected on the previous "revolutions," television and cable, led by entrepreneurs like William S. Paley of CBS and Ted Turner.

Comparatively, "the Internet landscape is much less defined," Wussler says. "Instant billionaires are creating the new media wave and defining the future."

But TV is still part of the action. Already, the four primary networks--ABC, CBS, NBC, and Fox--are making money from "dot-com subsidiaries and joint ventures," Wussler says. "Almost all traditional media organizations have in one way or another migrated to the Internet."

Taking TV companies online requires realizing the value of the combination, suggests June Herold, director of programming and development at Discovery Networks Online. For the Discovery Channel, the unprecedented audience for Discovery.com's Titanic coverage demonstrated the site's potential as a joint broadcast medium.

Combining Strengths

To grow on the Web, a national network must create new and unique content that supports and extends its television properties. For example, ABCnews.com is building on its personalities by launching a Web-only live interactive show with Sam Donaldson this fall.

MTV, which helped move music to television, is trying to keep up with the music boom online. The company combined its Web sites, MTV.com and VH1.com, with the music content site Sonic.net to create MTV Interactive.

MTV targets 12- to 24-year-olds, and VH1 aims for the 24 and older crowd. But Sonic.net is a music destination for anyone who loves music, says Justin Hertz, vice president of MTV Interactive.

In fact, MTV has long experimented with convergence services for its Internet-savvy audience. Its former Yak Live program broadcast real-time America Online chat room comments about videos. This fall, MTV launches Web Riot, a game show that pits studio contestants and 25,000 online participants.

"The Internet provides an opportunity to create new kinds of entertainment specific to the medium," Hertz says. For the recent MTV Video Music Awards, video directors worked with digital artists to produce Web coverage.

Convergence of the Boxes

If the television is the easy, dumb box, and the computer is the difficult, smart box, then convergence will have to combine some of both, CNN's Wussler notes.

As television people eye the Web as a new broadcast medium, some Internet folk have all but written off television for Internet content.

"I think interactive television has been dead for ten years and will be dead for another ten," says Naveen Jain, former Microsoft executive and current chair and chief executive officer of Infospace.com. "The television is not an information device. We watch television to be entertained."

Regardless of its future, television, with the Internet, offers increasing numbers of channels and choices. As Wussler puts it, "Television is king today, but content will be king tomorrow.

"http://www.pcworld.com/cgi-bin/pcwtoday?ID=12812

(Voluntary Disclosure: ST Rating- Strong Buy)

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BoardMark MemberMark



To: Sam who wrote (6601)9/16/1999 9:47:00 AM
From: ed doell  Respond to of 13157
 
Down a point on less than 100,000 shares at the open... shee-ish!