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Technology Stocks : All About Sun Microsystems -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: QwikSand who wrote (19962)9/20/1999 8:44:00 AM
From: JDN  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 64865
 
Dear QS: Your post makes all the sense in the world to me. I think for the AVERAGE user like myself the drawbacks with PC's is NOT the cost its the COMPLEXITY. I have said before, I am on my 3rd computer, looking to get my 4th and I still feel like a NOVICE. Everything, I mean everything, is complicated to me. The SunRay looks to me as though it will be much simpler for the average person to use, always be up-to-date and likely much more reliable. BANDWIDTH as you say is the key. As I surf the Net today at 28,8k today I would do almost anything to have a reliable 384k speed like you mentioned. JDN



To: QwikSand who wrote (19962)9/20/1999 10:22:00 AM
From: cfimx  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 64865
 
i agree with one thing you said:

>>To me it spells top<< <g>

and i'm not kidding. do you know how many things have to GO RIGHT for you with this THEORY. you have no idea what the world will look like in three or four years, let alone six months.



To: QwikSand who wrote (19962)9/20/1999 11:26:00 AM
From: Rusty Johnson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 64865
 
Several Plans Are Afoot to Create Desktop Software Via the Web

By KARA SWISHER and DON CLARK
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

The race is on to create a desktop on the Web.

Desktop.com, a secretive San Francisco start-up with big-name backers, Monday will launch an ambitious Internet service that offers consumers a complete graphical software environment, a Web equivalent to the desktop scheme presented by Microsoft Corp.'s Windows operating system.

The free service will let users customize their desktops with a range of Web-based programs, including word processing and games, and link up with other Web services, news feeds and e-mail services. The programs and consumer data are stored on Desktop.com's computers; all consumers need is an Internet connection and a current Web browser.

Others are moving in similar directions. Another new entry, MyWebOS.com Inc. says it has developed a kind of operating system for making programs that run on Web sites and operate much like conventional personal-computer programs.

The new ventures are part of a broader movement that is turning software from a product to a service, forcing changes on Microsoft and other computer-industry kingpins. Where some companies have already begun renting software, the latest entries are going a big step further: They have developed technical ground rules to let other companies write Web-based software, creating a development platform along the lines of Microsoft's Windows.

"This could redefine the browser experience, extending its capacity by making it easier and more powerful at the same time," says Mitch Kapor, a Desktop.com investor known for founding Lotus Development Corp. "That's a very significant idea."

Desktop.com's founders, part of an early wave of young Internet millionaires, previously created a free Web-based e-mail service called RocketMail and sold their company to Yahoo! Inc. in 1997 for $89 million. Their new venture received a hefty $29 million in initial venture-capital funding from Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., Sequoia Capital and Accel Partners, where Mr. Kapor is now a partner. Desktop.com has grown to 38 employees without giving much detail about what it was doing.

"We didn't want to reveal very much because we wanted to have first-mover advantage," said Katie Burke, Desktop.com's 29-year-old chief executive.

Desktop.com hopes to make money by selling advertising and placing icons from other Web sites on its desktop and in application programs. It will start with a small number of simple applications that it developed, such as utilities that let users chart stocks and sift through news articles.

But the company hopes to inspire thousands of additional programs by later releasing a development methodology, known in the industry as APIs, for applications programming interface. Ms. Burke says the company will spend more than $10 million to advertise the service and to strike a series of distribution deals in building its audience.

MyWebOS.com, a 10-person company based in Baltimore, has a different business model. It plans to make money by licensing its tools to other Internet sites and software companies that want to develop Web-based programs and rent them out. But the closely held company also will offer free software through its own site, including a word processor and later a spreadsheet and database, with no advertising support.

Where many Web-based programs are slower than conventional PC programs, MyWebOS.com says its technology allows developers to create programs that are actually faster -- even over slow Internet connections.

The company has been funded by individual investors so far. But big venture capitalists are knocking on the door, says Chief Executive Shervin Pishevar, 25, an entrepreneur who teamed up with an 18-year-old Swedish programmer named Fredrik Malmer. Heexpects to announce major partnerships with Web companies next month.

"This will change the distribution of software," he said.



To: QwikSand who wrote (19962)9/20/1999 1:32:00 PM
From: Charles Tutt  Respond to of 64865
 
I went to the "Parade of Homes" here a few weeks ago. They had very high-end audio systems for whole-house music, and had dedicated PC's (with touch sensitive flat panel monitors!) controlling them. How much easier it would be to use a SunRay for an application like that ...

JMHO.