SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Intel Corporation (INTC) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)9/22/1999 2:42:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
PB - Re: "I have been informed that P856 and P802 can and do run con-currently in the same facilities without the intention of running one or the other."

How did you find out about this ?

Paul



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)9/22/1999 2:44:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Respond to of 186894
 
PB and Intel Investors - Intel 133 MHz FSB Pentium IIIs - 600 and 533 MHz - are now available on Pricewatch.com !!

I don't know how the Memory/Chip Set issue is going to play out - Camino/Rambus or VIA/PC133 or Intel 81x/PC133, but the PROCESSORS are now available at:

pricewatch.com

Paul



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)9/22/1999 2:58:00 AM
From: Elmer  Respond to of 186894
 
Re: "I apologize for the error."

We'll let you live...... for now....

EP



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)9/23/1999 9:30:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Chip shortage threatens electronics market -FT

LONDON, Sept 24 (Reuters) - Makers of mobile phones, hand-held computers and other
electronic goods may not be able to meet demand due to a shortage of flash memory chips,
the Financial Times reported on Friday.

Some mobile handset manufacturers including France's Alcatel have indicated that output is
being constrained by the shortage, the paper added.

The world market for flash memory chips -- lightweight storage devices that retain memory when power is switched off -- is
expected to reach $3.24 billion this year, up from $2.49 billion in 1998. Semiconductor market research group IC Insights is
forecasting $4 billion for 2000.

These chips are made by Intel Corp (Nasdaq:INTC - news), the world's largest chipmaker, and a handful of other U.S,
Japanese and European companies.

Alcatel will lift its GSM mobile phone handset output to between 10 and 11 million units this year, but it could have sold more
had components not been in short supply. However, Finland's Nokia and Sweden's Ericsson said they have enough
components to meet production this year.

Intel says worldwide demand for the chips jumped to 240 million units in the latest quarter from 160 million units in the fourth
quarter of last year, but said it was still able to meet commitments to customers.

But Benny Ginman, a director of Intel in Europe, said his group was ''not in a very good position'' to take on additional orders.



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)10/6/1999 12:40:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
StreetAdvisor.com ......""In light of the Barron's article harshly criticizing Intel
over the weekend, I decided to tell the real story on
Intel, which the publication so elegantly failed to
mention.

The rudimentary calculation of Intel's fair value
based on a multiple of Intel's earnings growth
(17%), which sets a fair value, by the author, of
$39 to $59 wholly ignores the fact that multiples
of earnings growth require factoring in current
interest rates. This is why the S&P 500 currently
trades at 24.7 times this year's consensus
earnings, at a multiple of 1.85 times the 2000
growth rate of 13.5%. Since the compounding of
growth rates over time creates a significant
difference between 13.5% and 17% earnings
growth, a multiple of 2 times earnings for Intel not
only seems reasonable, but cheap.
The statement that "powerhouses in the server
business, like IBM and Sun Microsystems, are not
likely to willingly cede market share to Intel" is
wholly absurd. IBM's server market share was half
of that of Dell, the #2 server producer. Dell is
wholly committed to Intel, and only Intel,
processors. Further, the simple fact is that PC
makers do not have the power to control
purchasing decisions of customers. The corporate
world would love to standardize on one company's
processors. Intel's next generation of processors
will enable them to do so, as the Itanium supports
every major operating system.
The Itanium processor is perhaps the most robust
processor ever built. With Intel's billions of dollars
of research and development funds pouring into its
development, it will be virtually impossible for the
Alpha processor to maintain any current lead for
much longer.
Demand for servers is overwhelming. Craig Barret,
CEO of Intel, predicts that only 5% of the server
demand for the next 5 years has been met. That
provides a massive market opportunity for the
research and development gorilla.
Intel continues to drive manufacturing costs of its
chips lower, continually increasing the margins it
realizes despite lower prices. Instead of the
self-fulfilling death spiral that Barron's sees, Intel
is in a wealth-creating tornado. Plummeting costs
allow Intel to push prices lower, keeping demand
for PCs growing, boosting the top and bottom line
simultaneously.
Intel's investments are no secret, but nonetheless
are almost completely ignored by Barron's.
Streaming media created the need for much of
today's computing power for consumers, and a
healthy chunk of server power, yet the history of
Intel's investment in Broadcast.com is not even
mentioned (the company sold their stake earlier
this year). That said, Intel's current investments
will likely drive consumer and server demand well
into the future.
The migration to the Microsoft 2000 operating
system for serving web sites, as well as for
corporate servers will only increase demand for
Intel processors, which are the proven processor
for Microsoft operating systems.
Intel's transference of their design and
manufacturing expertise to chips for networking
devices provides significant upside to the Intel
story. With a billion people on the net, and millions
of those on broadband connections, all those Intel
servers need fast routers and switches to get
their data to the destination. $8 billion goes a lot
further than the mere millions that start-ups have.
Intel is also using its engineering expertise to set
the standard for how networking devices work
together. The company's Internet Exchange
Architecture could become the standard of
networking that Intel's processor blueprints are for
computing.
Intel's ability to manufacture semiconductors for
fractions of what competitors can gives it
significant competitive advantage in the extremely
price sensitive area of appliance processors (palm
tops, set tops boxes, phones, etc.).

Given these prospects, and the rest of the complete
picture we reviewed in August (link to full analysis),
Intel is not just fairly valued, but significantly
undervalued.""



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)10/13/1999 8:12:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
The Sky Isn't Falling

10-13-99 4:55 PM by Kelli A. Stebel | Many fund managers remain
bullish on Intel INTC even though the chipmaker posted disappointing
third-quarter earnings. On Tuesday, Intel reported earnings of 55
cents per share, just under the consensus estimate of 57 cents.

"I'd buy Intel today," says Rose Papp, who comanages Papp Stock
LRPSX and Papp America-Abroad PAAFX with Roy Papp. The
funds have huge bets of 6% and 9% of assets in Intel, respectively.

Intel has been a longtime holding for the Papps, and they aren't about
to abandon ship. "I'm not upset by yesterday," added Roy Papp,
"Intel is up more than 20% for the year. That's not exactly a disaster."
For the Papps, Intel's disappointment was a short-term event. Rose
Papp says the primary reason for the disappointment was a delay in
releasing some new chips to the market, which hurt revenues. Papp
thinks, though, that those chips will be released in the fourth quarter
and will help improve margins.

The Papps are looking beyond 1999's fourth quarter. According to
them, Intel has a successful business model going well into the 21st
century. Rose Papp cites Intel's recent foray into network
communications as a positive move. Intel recently bought
network-chipmaker Level One Communications, and also acquired
the rights to StrongARM, a chip design, from Digital Equipment. She
acknowledges that there will be heated competition in that area, but
"in 1999, Intel spent 50% of R&D on servers and workstations. That
area has huge growth potential."

Richard Dahlberg, manager of Pioneer II PIOTX, shares the Papps'
enthusiasm about Intel, but not for the exact same reasons. Dalhberg
thinks Intel's move into communications is more peripheral, and strong
revenues will continue to come from their chip business. "The upturn
we've seen lately in semiconductors will last a couple of years and
Intel's fast chips will give them an edge," says Dahlberg.

Dahlberg also expects revenues from abroad to help Intel. He says he
wants to invest more in companies with an international scope because
"the U.S. economy is looking a bit suspect after being red-hot for
eight years." Intel's international exposure, then, will help weather any
storms on the domestic front.

Not all fund managers, however, are so confident about Intel's future.
Blaine Rollins, who runs Janus Balanced JABAX and Janus
Equity-Income JAEIX, has stayed away from Intel. "I'd rather own
companies benefiting from cheap PCs than Intel," says Rollins. In the
past, Intel has had incredible revenues, powered by high-end chip
sales. As computer prices have dropped substantially in the past year,
though, that landscape has changed. Today, more than 50% of
computers sold cost less than $1,000, and many are packed with
chips manufactured by Intel's competitors.

Interestingly, Janus' fund lineup, which is known for stocking up on
tech names, doesn't own much Intel. Only Janus Growth and Income
JAGIX has a modest 0.6% position in Intel, according to the June 30,
1999 portfolio.

In addition, managers on Morningstar's technology roundtable were
wary of the stock even before the earnings announcement. Warren
Lammert of Janus Mercury Fund JAMRX said the PC's importance is
waning and Intel is short on intellectual property.

P o s t e d 1 0 - 1 3 - 1 9 9 9

Kelli A. Stebel is an Associate Editorial Analyst with Morningstar.
She can be reached at kelli.stebel@morningstar.com



Search For



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)10/13/1999 8:48:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Taking the Long View on Intel
By Monica Rivituso

INTEL (INTC) has seen better days, that's for sure.

The chipmaker's third-quarter report, which came after the close on Tuesday, was a big disappointment,
with earnings coming in two cents below consensus and gross margins declining. Given that analysts
were looking for Intel to wow the Street with an earnings surprise and a boost in profitability, investors took
the news especially hard. Intel's stock fell nearly 6% today, dragging the rest of the market down with it.

But that's old news. It's no secret that the average selling price (ASP) of the typical microprocessor is in
decline. And there's no arguing that declining prices in your bread-and-butter product eventually hurt
margins. Intel and its cadre of loyal analysts have tried their best to insist for about a year now that
increased volume for the company's higher-end chips would offset steep price declines on the low end.
But let's face it: When a $1,000 PC can do today what a $5,000 PC did a couple of years ago, demand at
the high end doesn't provide the opportunity it once did. If the slide in ASPs hadn't shown up this quarter,
it would have reared its ugly head before long.

What's becoming clear is that an investment in Intel is turning into a bet on a remarkable company's
ability to escape this rut. If you look beyond this quarter's report, and try to glimpse the future of the
technology business, you might see some things in Intel's behavior that are very encouraging indeed.

What's happening is that Intel is scrambling to build a business in networking chips -- the high-margin
silicon that may end up powering the Internet. And for a company that has grown fat from capitalizing on
the microprocessor business for almost two decades, that's a pretty big shift. While there will likely be a
day when Intel is a chipmaker of a different stripe, some analysts -- like SG Cowen's Drew Peck -- say
those growing pains could hurt the stock in the short term.

But Peck is hardly an Intel bear. On the contrary, "I think what they're doing is extremely smart," he says,
"but it's fraught with risk." The truth is, analyzing Intel will increasingly mean finding different metrics to
measure its progress. Microprocessor ASPs used to mean a lot. From now on, they'll probably tell the
same old story.

So what is Intel's new strategy? Clearly the company isn't going to bail out of microprocessors. While
margins may shrink in this business, Intel still has what amounts to a monopoly market share (talk about
a cash cow). Rather, Intel has tried to determine what the most profitable area of the chip world will be in
the coming decade so it can improve the mix of its portfolio. It didn't have to look far: The answer was
networking, the plumbing of the Internet.

While PCs have become so powerful that a relatively inexpensive desktop can now serve up a Web site,
the bandwidth connecting those computers hasn't caught up. Intel figures it can use its vast engineering
talent to devise "networking" chips that provide intelligence to speed up those connections. That way,
while other companies build the Internet's connective tissue, Intel could manufacture the nervous system.
The company's hope is that equipment outfits like Cisco Systems (CSCO) would then build boxes around
Intel silicon. (See "Intel's Networking Power Play" for a more detailed discussion of the company's
strategy and its obstacles.)

This quarter alone, the chipmaker spent $3 billion on four acquisitions designed to strengthen its position
in the networking arena: Level One Communications, Dialogic, Softcom Microsystems and Netboost.
"From the top to the bottom of the communications business, they're making investments," Peck says.

The move into the networking arena, of course, is a controversial one. Not only is it brand new territory for
Intel, but the company's vision of a networking chip conflicts with Cisco's vision, among others.
Essentially, Intel is trying to rewrite the rules (again, see "Intel's Networking Power Play"). But Danny
Lam, an industry analyst and director of Fisher-Holstein, points out that the chipmaker has successfully
shifted gears once before. In the mid '80s it decided to get out of the memory chip business. "Clearly the
company has demonstrated the capacity to change its stripes once before," he says.

Getting out of a business is much easier than getting into one, however, which is why Peck is short-term
skeptical. And he sees some of the growing pains showing up already. In Intel's quarterly report, Peck
says there are clear signs the acquisitions led to a sharp rise in operating expenses. The purchases
mean Intel is now paying more people and racking up more R&D costs. That will likely prove a drag on
earnings through next year, Peck says. And seeing as how the benefits from the technologies Intel
acquired might not be seen for another 18 to 24 months, "there's going to be a long gestation period while
they reinvent themselves," Peck explains.

Peck found it disquieting that Intel didn't discuss any of its long-term goals on yesterday's conference
call. Management acted as if the quarter wasn't representative of a larger transition. But that's typical
Intel. Even as he cut his rating on the stock to Neutral from Buy, Peck emphasized that he's not negative
on the chip giant. It's only the short term that bugs him. Would he recommend the stock at some point in
the future? Probably.

But by then, he says, Intel might be covered by a networking analyst.



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)10/18/1999 12:29:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 186894
 
On Wednesday, Mona Eraiba, chip analyst at
Gruntal & Co., said Intel's (INTC) disappointing
third-quarter earnings results actually represent "a
buying opportunity. We think it's short-term in nature.
Once we start moving into the fourth quarter with
strong demand, better manufacturing efficiency,
(you'll) see a rebound in the stock."



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)10/25/1999 8:20:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 186894
 
(Online News, 10/25/99 04:48 PM)

Intel's latest Pentium IIIs alter
server landscape
By Mark Hall and Stacy Collett

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- In a room at the Parkside Hall here that
was cold enough to cool the hottest Pentium III
microprocessor, Intel Corp. officially announced its latest
extensions to the Pentium processor architecture --
Pentium III and Pentium III Xeon chips using 0.18-micron
technology.

One of the biggest benefits to data-center managers will be
the smaller server sizes the new chips permit, according to
Richard Doherty, an analyst at Envisioneering Group in
Seaford, N.Y. "Managers will have more system choices
with more performance that fit into a smaller space, which
is a great thing in a crowded data center," he said.

The 15 new processors add to the increasing complexity of
the Intel product line. Paul Otellini, company executive vice
president, said that the world's largest chip maker can't
serve the market with its old streamlined product offerings.
He said the product segmentation the company began in
the mid-1990s will continue, and that Intel "will take an even
more tailored approach" to chip production as it attempts to
provide microprocessors from high-end servers to low-end
mobile devices.

John Lazlo, a semiconductor analyst at PaineWebber Inc. in
San Francisco, said he expects Intel to gain server market
share with its new products. In the Internet server business,
Lazlo said, Intel has gone from almost zero four years ago
to about 80% today because of its "price-performance
value." Intel's multipronged processor strategy is rapidly
leading to a "commoditization of servers,"he added.

The biggest problem for users might be patience. Compaq
Computer Corp. won't roll out servers based on the new
processor until early next year because such a major
technology transition is too risky for customers that are so
close to year's end. "The message we've gotten from our
customers is 'Stability is king for [the] next couple of
months,' " said Tom Lattin, Compaq's director of corporate
server marketing.

But evaluation models of Compaq's ProLiant 3000 two-way
server with Intel's 733-MHz processor will be available to
customers in the fourth quarter, Lattin added.

Users of IBM's Netfinity 5600 servers will be able to upgrade
to the new 533-MHz, 500-MHz or 667-MHz processors next
month. Servers with 700-MHz and 733-MHz processors will
be available in 2000, according to a spokeswoman.

On other hand, Dell Computer Corp. is taking orders now
for Precision WorkStations equipped with Pentium III
processors at either 650 MHz or 700 MHz. Also available
today are both the midrange Dell Precision WorkStation 410
and entry-level Dell Precision WorkStation 210 with
650-MHz and 700-MHz Pentium III processors in single- and
dual-processor configurations. Prices for a Dell Precision
WorkStation with the new 650-MHz Pentium III processor
start at $2,100.



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)12/3/1999 9:56:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 186894
 
Real to use Intel's slide presentation
technology
By Stephanie Miles
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
December 3, 1999, 5:30 p.m. PT

On Monday, Real Networks will unveil the RealPresenter technology, which will
allow companies to stream slide presentations via the Internet.

Real Networks has licensed the Intel Internet Presentation software from the chip giant and
will incorporate it into its product, sources close to Intel confirmed.

With the IIPS, companies can send presentations such as those created using Microsoft's
PowerPoint over the Internet. Already, many companies
use the Internet for "Webcasts," of important
announcements, such as earnings reports. Now, Intel and
Real will be streamlining the process by offering automated
slide-show software.

Real Networks declined to comment. The two companies
last year entered into an alliance to cooperate on Internet
video technology.

Real's streaming media technology allows Web surfers to
watch video or listen to audio in real time, rather than
downloading the media to their hard drive and playing it
back.

Both companies are interested in advancing the popularity
and relevance of streaming broadcasts, for separate reasons. For Real, the company's
business depends on propagating its software as the dominant tool for such broadcasts.
Intel, on the other hand, benefits as consumers upgrade to pricier computers which can
handle these bandwidth and processor-intensive broadcasts.

When released, the software will be a plug-in, downloaded as an addition to typical Internet
surfing software. Dubbed RealPresenter, the plug-in will work in tandem with Real
Networks streaming software.

News.com's Michael Kanellos contributed to this story.



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)12/7/1999 11:57:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Intel unveils Bluetooth line-up

By Mark LaPedus
Electronic Buyers' News
(12/07/99, 06:23:08 PM EDT)

SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- Intel Corp. today unveiled its first line-up of products for
the Bluetooth market, which will enable computer manufacturers to add wireless
communications capabilities into their portable systems.

Intel's new RF-based modules and software drivers will allow notebooks to
exchange data with cellular phones and other handheld equipment over a wireless
network, according to Frank Spindler, vice president and marketing director of
Intel's Mobile and Handheld Products Group, speaking at the Bluetooth
Developers Conference in Los Angeles..

"We will provide our customers with hardware, software, design tools and support
to allow them to deliver [Bluetooth-enabled capabilities] in notebook designs,"
Spindler said.

Originally developed last year by Ericsson, IBM, Intel, Nokia, and Toshiba,
Bluetooth is a short-range protocol designed to transport data across notebooks,
cellular phones, and other products over a 1-Mbit/second wireless network.

Several companies have already introduced Bluetooth-enabled products, including
chips and hardware. The latest is Intel, which will position itself as a one-stop
shop of Bluetooth-enabled products.

Intel will sell a board-level solution built around RF-based components from
third-party chip makers, the company said. The company will also sell its own,
internally-developed software drivers to OEMs.

The company's products, which will sell for about $30, will be shipped in
mid-2000.



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)12/16/1999 8:32:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
Intel Takes Steps to Boost Production at Several U.S. Locations
12/16/99 3:41:00 PM
Source: Bloomberg News

Santa Clara, California, Dec. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Intel Corp., the world's biggest semiconductor maker,
is taking steps to boost production at several plants in the U.S. as demand for its microprocessors
and others products rises.

The company is reopening a plant in Aloha, Oregon, to make memory chips. It's spending $800
million to renovate a plant in Hudson, Massachusetts, and has filed for permits to build a new plant
near Chandler, Arizona. No decision has been made on whether to build in Chandler, a spokesman
said.

Intel is struggling to meet demand for microprocessors right now as
more people buy personal computers to get on the Internet. It's also
selling more flash-memory chips, which retain information even when
the power in a device is turned off. The chips are crucial for making
mobile phones and electronic organizers.

''We're in the process of evaluating our capacity plans,'' Intel
spokesman Chuck Mulloy said of the Chandler permits.

Intel already has two plants in Chandler, near Phoenix. ''We're looking
at other sites'' too, Mulloy said.

The company is moving ahead with plans to reopen the Aloha plant,
just west of Portland, to make flash memory. The factory was built in
1978 and mothballed in 1998.

Flash memory, based on technology Intel invented, is one of the fastest-growing parts of the
semiconductor market. Flash sales are expected to rise 63 percent to $4.1 billion this year,
according to the Semiconductor Industry Association.

Upgrading Hudson

Intel unveiled the investment plan for the Hudson, Massachusetts, plant today. It bought the factory
from Digital Equipment Corp. in May 1998 as part of a settlement of patent litigation with Digital. Intel
runs all of its ''fabs'' with the same machines and processes, and the Hudson plant has to be brought
up to the same standards as the others, Mulloy said.

Intel plans to spend $800 million on the plant in the next two years and will add 450 jobs there,
Mulloy said. The plant is where Intel is making its new Network Processor, which is designed to run
computer networking equipment.

Intel has 12 plants now making chips around the world.

The company said in late October that it would meet all commitments to sell chips to customers,
even though supplies of the products were ''tight'' because of rising demand.

Shares of the Santa Clara, California-based company rose 1 5/16 to 80 1/4 today. They've risen 35
percent this year.

Intel's plans to reopen the plant in Oregon were reported earlier by the Oregonian newspaper. The
company's request for permits in Arizona was reported earlier by the Mesa Tribune.

Related News

Intel Takes Steps to
Boost - Bloomberg

Brazil's Itautec Soars -
Bloomberg

U.S. Equity Movers:
Cisco, - Bloomberg

U.S. Stocks Rise;
Microsoft - Bloomberg

Free Investor Dispatch




To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)12/30/1999 5:40:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 186894
 
Intel sells flash card line
Centennial Technologies purchases
memory card business for $13.2M
December 30, 1999: 4:48 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Centennial Technologies Inc.,
an upstart PC card manufacturer, acquired Intel
Corp.'s flash memory card business Thursday for
approximately $13.2 million in cash and stock.
The deal positions the Boston-based Centennial
as one of the world's leading suppliers of linear flash
memory cards to original equipment manufacturers,
while providing a significant boost to the company's
financial turnaround.
The agreement calls for Centennial to acquire the
card business, which boasts annual revenues of
approximately $20 million, for $6 million in cash, a
note for up to $4.5 million due when certain
contingencies are met and roughly 16 percent of
Centennial's outstanding shares -- worth roughly $2.7
million based on the company's closing price of 4-3/8
Wednesday.
Centennial (CENL) shares shot up on word of the
deal Thursday, climbing 4-3/4 to 9-1/8, or more than
108 percent, in Thursday trading, according to
preliminary data. Intel (INTC) shares fell 3/16
83-11/16.
Although it is not specifically written into the
agreement, Intel will continue to provide the silicon
components for the cards, according to Richard
Pulsifer, Centennial's chief financial officer.
"We've been buying Intel flash memory since the
company has been around and we will continue to do
so,” Pulsifer said.
Intel officials said the deal allows the company to
focus better on other areas of flash memory
production.
"We believe we are the leader in flash business,”
said Robert Manetta, an Intel spokesman. "What we
are doing is narrowing our focus a little more.”
Centennial intends to produce the cards on new
equipment purchased this year as part of a $1 billion
strategic investment in new products and
technologies.
The $20 million in annual sales generated by
Intel's flash card business will provide a significant
boost in revenue to Centennial, which recorded $27.6
million in revenue during its most recent fiscal year
ended in March.
It also continues the turnaround continued by the
company's president and chief executive officer,
Michael Hone, and his management team, who were
brought on in 1997 to turn around a company that
lost nearly $43 million that year. The company turned
a $2.8 million profit during its fiscal 1999.



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)1/4/2000 11:29:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 186894
 
Tuesday January 4, 11:00 pm Eastern Time

Intel to unveil Web appliance strategy

By Duncan Martell

PALO ALTO, Calif., Jan. 5 (Reuters) - In its latest move beyond its core business of
microprocessors that power personal computers, Intel Corp. (NasdaqNM:INTC - news)
will announce on Wednesday its strategy for developing Web appliances that would be
resold by Internet service providers and phone companies.

The gizmos, due out by midyear and aimed at the consumer market, will be designed by Intel, the world's largest chipmaker. At
least initially they will be made by consumer electronics manufacturers, Claude Leglise, vice president of Intel's architecture
business group and head of its home products group, told Reuters.

Although estimates for the number of Web appliances -- whether the size of a notepad, cellular phone, or laptop computer --
vary widely, Leglise said the market could expand from several hundred thousand units this year to 2 million or more in the next
three years.

''It's just a beginning,'' Leglise said of the nascent Web appliance market. ''There will be little ones and big ones but there will
be a lot of them.''

Intel, Santa Clara, Calif., plans to provide the building blocks to its customers -- telecommunications firms and other service
providers -- that let the devices work, Leglise said.

In addition to designing and making devices that will carry the Intel brand name, it first is developing the software that makes
the devices work and striking deals with companies such as Lucent Technologies Inc. (NYSE:LU - news), InfoSpace.com Inc.
(NasdaqNM:INSP - news), which is a portal to other portals.

Intel is already expanding beyond its traditional business of microprocessors -- which it's been in since the late 1980s and
which accounts for virtually all of its profits. It's working aggressively to expand its data networking business, which analysts
estimate now has about $750 million and sales.

Also in the past 12 months, Intel has started operating vast ''server farms,'' collection of powerful computers on which Intel
hosts data and Web sites for companies. The move into services is aimed at helping to boost revenue as sales of PCs are
showing signs of moderation.

Intel is working with Lucent, for example, on a so-called unified message mailbox that would deliver both voice- and e-mail in
one device. ''By offering these services as options and integrating them into our platform, then we can help our customers
create more consumer services,'' Leglise said.

There will be more announcements, Leglise said, adding that ''we've already delivered appliance prototypes and software to
our customers.''

Intel will be showcasing a few prototype designs at the mammoth Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas later this week.
The devices will access the Internet via dial-up analog phone lines, through DSL or cable-modem high-speed access, among
other technologies.

Intel's latest moves beyond its bread-and-butter business come as some have questioned how Intel can keep sales and profits
growing as the PC market shows signs of slowing growth. In the United States, just over 50 percent of homes own a PC,
though in Western Europe and Japan, it's about 25 percent.

''We look at this as offering a different model than the PC,'' Leglise said, adding that ''it's definitely not an acknowledgment of
the death of the PC.''



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)1/6/2000 12:38:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 186894
 
InfoSpace Teams with Intel
Wednesday January 05 01:41 PM


Adding to the hubbub that Intel is jumping in the portable devices space,
InfoSpace.com said Wednesday it will provide content to the chip giant's
Internet gizmos. Intel is expected to give the public a glimpse of the new
devices later this week at CES in Las Vegas. Reuters

Intel Has a Web Appliance Inside
Wednesday January 05 09:44 AM


Intel is branching out beyond the world of PC chips. The company has
announced plans for an Internet device that runs Linux and both makes
phone calls and accesses the Net. Due out in mid-2000, the device will
cost $300 to $700, plus a monthly service fee of $25 to $30. Analysts say
the appliance's large screen and non-reliance on TV are two key factors
that could lead to its success. CNET News.com



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)1/7/2000 11:41:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Intel enters digital subscriber line market

By Mark LaPedus
Electronic Buyers' News
(01/07/00, 04:21:53 PM EDT)

LAS VEGAS -- Intel Corp. has entered the digital subscriber line market with a
modem based on a chip set from GlobeSpan Inc. Later this year, Intel plans to
drive deeper into the sector with its own DSL silicon.

The PRO/DSL 3100 high-speed digital modem is geared for the consumer and
small-business markets and supports both full-rate asymmetric DSL and G.Lite
protocols, according to Chad Taggard, business unit manager at Intel's
Broadband Access Operation, in an interview at the Consumer Electronics Show
in Las Vegas.

ADSL is a high-speed digital-modem technology that transports data at speeds
up to 8 Mbits/s. G.Lite is a stripped-down, consumer-oriented version of ADSL
said to transport data at 1.5 Mbits/s.

"When you talk to the phone companies, they want [OEMs and chip makers] to
support both standards," Taggard said.

The new modem represents Intel's latest entry in the booming communications
sector, although the company's broader DSL strategy is still shrouded in
mystery. Taggard confirmed that the new modem uses a chip set from
GlobeSpan of Red Bank, N.J., but in the future said Intel also plans to use
third-party DSL ICs from Analog Devices Inc.

And Intel's DSL-chip relationship with Analog Devices and GlobeSpan is likely to
be only on an interim basis, according to analysts. This year, the Santa Clara,
Calif., company is expected to roll out its own DSL chip--a move that would put it
in yet another new and booming communications-IC market.

Taggard acknowledged the company is developing its own DSL chipset line, but
he declined to comment on the details. "We're progressing in our development
plans," he said. "Right now we're using third-party chipsets to reduce our time to
market."

Though Intel is designing a proprietary chip set, some analysts speculate that
the company could also buy its way into the DSL-chip market via an acquisition.
Intel already owns small equity stakes in two competitive DSL-chip makers,
including GlobeSpan and Integrated Telecom Express Inc.

And Intel is no stranger to acquisitions, especially in the communications-IC
space. Last year, it spent billions to acquire several major communications-chip
makers, including DSP Communications, Level One Communications, NetBoost,
Softcom Microsystems, and Stanford Telecommunications' cable-modem IC
operations.

Intel's new DSL modem will begin shipping next month at a suggested retail
price of $295.



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)1/12/2000 9:47:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 186894
 
Intel update.....http://www.zdii.com/industry_list.asp?mode=news&doc_id=ZE502678&pic=Y



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)1/14/2000 10:32:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Inside the numbers with Intel Fayad Abbasi

Intel Corp. NASDAQ:INTC
Technology
Quote | News | Snapshot | Charts | SEC | Ratings

Jan 14 2000

The controversy over Intel's (INTC : Nasdaq) earnings
stems from two line items: amortization of goodwill and
interest and other income. The guidance for amortization
was $185 million while the company actually reported
$241 million. The accusation is that the higher
amortization is a way for Intel to play with their
numbers. The company has made several acquisitions
over the past year (for a detail of the acquisitions for
1999, see the company web page). While it is difficult to
know exactly what the amortization schedule is on
acquisitions, the higher than expected number does not
benefit the company in this quarter. In fact, it
decreases stated earnings. The additional $56 million in
amortization decreases earnings per share (EPS) by
$0.017. Therefore, if anything, we should add about
$0.02 per share to the stated numbers.

It is important to note that amortization of goodwill is
not a cash item. In terms of cash earnings, the numbers
do not matter.

As for interest and other income, guidance was for $280
million. The company actually realized $508 million in
interest and other income. Because of the increase in
realized gains of its investments, known as Intel Capital,
the company realized an additional $228 million, or
$0.068 per share. After tax, that number amounts to
about $0.05 per share.

The net result of these two modifications to earnings
results in EPS of $0.66, or $0.03 per share higher than
expectations of $0.63 and $0.01 higher than the whisper
numbers of $0.65. Either way, Intel had a great quarter.
It is also important to note that gross margins were
higher than guidance as well, at 61.3%. The higher gross
margin number is a welcome for Intel, considering the
pressures on gross margins over the past two years. In
4Q98, gross margins were 58.5%.

Does this matter?

At the end of the day, cash is king. While investors are
valuing Intel based on operational performance, any
additional gains can only help the company. The
additional $228 million from investment gains can help
accelerate investment plans for the company in its
product transition to smaller line width technologies or
can be used to repurchase shares. Both benefit
investors. An accelerated amortization does not impact
cash but can reduce future amortization charges. As a
result, the company is in a better position to absorb
additional company acquisitions, which also benefits
investors. No matter how you approach it, the real
winners are the faithful investors. FWD this page to:



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)1/17/2000 9:02:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Intel, Memory Suppliers Launch
DRAM Alliance
(01/17/00, 5:33 p.m. ET) By Jack Robertson, Semiconductor Business
News

Intel and five memory chip partners formed
an alliance Monday to develop a
next-generation DRAM format, which is
expected to be ready for use in 2003.

As reported late last month, the alliance teams Intel with
Hyundai MicroElectronics, Infineon, Micron, NEC, and
Samsung to develop the new DRAM architecture.
The new DRAM format will use packet data, similar to
the current Direct Rambus DRAM architecture, but it
will also offer a wider bandwidth, lower latency, lower
cost, and will be scalable to new memory densities, said
a spokesman for the new alliance.

The new memory chip will supplement the projected
next-generation Double Data Rate-2 SDRAM, which is
also expected to come on the market in the same 2003
time period. A spokesman said the new alliance's
DRAM architecture and DDR-2 are expected to find
different application markets and won't compete with
each other.

The spokesman also confirmed that Rambus of
Mountain View, Calif., was not a member of the
alliance.

The new alliance emphasized that its next-generation
DRAM architecture "will be industry developed."
Sources said this was a major turn-around for Santa
Clara, Calif.-based Intel, which had tried
single-handedly to dictate the adoption of Rambus'
Direct RDRAM over rival PC133 SDRAM and DDR
memories.

The DRAM companies and Intel said Monday that they
will work together with industry participants to develop
the architecture, electrical and physical design, and
related infrastructure. The partners said they will
provide other interested companies access to design
information and provide inputs in the development
process by signing a participant's agreement.
Specifications will be provided to all participants for
review and feedback.

The five DRAM members of the alliance control more
than 80 percent of the global dynamic memory market.


......Intel Plays Catch-up In PC Chip
Sets
(01/17/00, 5:42 p.m. ET) By David Lammers and Will Wade, EE Times

With Rambus-based systems still too
expensive for mainstream desktop PCs,
Intel next quarter said it plans to release its
Solano chip set, supporting 133-MHz
synchronous-DRAM technology. But Intel's
chip set operation is playing catch-up to Via
Technologies, which this week began
shipping its Apollo KX133 chip set for
Advanced Micro Devices' Athlon processor.
The chip set supports PC133 memory, an
AGP-4X graphics port, and AMD's 200-MHz
front-side bus.

The shootout between the Solano and Apollo KX133
could make this "one of the most interesting years in a
long time, because we have competing, alternative
architectures," said Dean McCarron, principal analyst at
Mercury Research, in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Intel's stumble on the road to Rambus memories may
have handed a market advantage to Via in chip sets and
to AMD in processors that could last the next several
months, analysts said.

Intel's Solano chip set is likely to be renamed the "815"
when it goes into production. It is considered an
intermediary step between the 810 chip set with
integrated graphics and the 820 Camino product, which
supports the Rambus memory technology.

Both the 820 and the latest version of the 810 family,
the 810E, feature a 133-MHz front-side bus. Solano is
expected to include both an integrated graphics core
and an AGP-4X port for users that want to upgrade
performance with an add-in graphics card.

Peter Glaskowsky, who tracks chip set and graphics
technologies at MicroDesign Resources, in Sebastopol,
Calif., said Via's KX133 chip set for the Athlon is
"essentially equivalent" to Via's Apollo Pro133A chip
set for Intel-based systems, which also supports a
133-MHz front-side bus.

Until now, anyone who bought an Athlon-based system
didn't get PC133 or the AGP-4X graphics port, which
Via supported only on Intel-based systems.

"The OEMs can say, 'Now you get all the right
features,' and in my opinion, the performance is going to
be very good," Glaskowsky said. "Via ships very
high-quality chip sets these days. It has put a lot of
resources into chip sets over the last two years, and the
company ships a much better product now than it did
two years ago."

Obvious Complexity
Chip set design is becoming extremely complex, he
added. Those difficulties were evident in Intel's 820 line,
which was "a big disappointment to OEMs. In order to
have a system faster than one based on the [older BX
product line], they have to use Rambus memory, which
is prohibitively expensive."

The 820, said Glaskowsky, provides "a way to
re-equip the system with a translator that can work with
SDRAMs, but that brings on performance problems.
So Solano is hopefully going to fix those problems, and
I believe it does."

The Solano will be an important product this year
because Intel's chip set division has fallen behind its
competitors in both desktops and low-end servers.

"Intel does offer good desktop chip sets, but they are
not as good as Via's right now," said Glaskowsky. "I
think they have accepted that and decided to do
something about it [with Solano]. But the situation we
are in right now is kind of weird. Here we have this big,
successful Intel that has missed out on the sweet spot of
the desktop market. And they also have missed out in
the 2X and 4X server market where Reliance
[Computer] is doing so well. That indicates some failing
in Intel's chip set operation."

By the middle of this year, Mercury's McCarron said he
expects the PC market to be focused on PC133-based
desktops, running a 133-MHz front-side bus, making
Solano a crucial product.

"There is a huge vacuum developing in the market, and
that is exactly where Solano fits in," said McCarron.
"Depending on how long it takes for Intel to fill that gap,
it gives Via an entry."

Via's advantage will be "pretty much erased by
midyear," he added.

The KX133 is equally important for the Athlon camp,
because it will help maintain a performance edge over
Intel.

"Putting faster memory onto the already-fast 200-MHz
Athlon bus should give systems a performance boost of
5 percent to 10 percent," said Nathan Brookwood,
principal analyst at market research firm Insight64, in
Saratoga, Calif. "The Athlon is currently running neck
and neck with Intel's Coppermine chips, so this chip set
is critical for AMD."

In large part, Solano takes on added importance
because of Intel's missteps with Rambus DRAMs. Not
only are the RDRAM chips expensive, but Intel
dropped the ball twice in high-profile delays getting the
attendant 820 chip set to market. That caused bad
blood with OEMs such as Dell, which had bet heavily
on the Rambus technology.

With few DRAM companies shipping Rambus DRAMs
in volume, and with premiums hovering in the 50
percent range compared with SDRAMs, McCarron
said the RDRAM/820 systems will remain pigeonholed
at the very high end this year.

"We've heard about continuing yield problems, which
are partly due to the fundamental die size penalty on the
RDRAMs," he said. "Demand has not been as high as
expected."

Michael Slater, editorial director at MicroDesign
Resources, said Intel "did misjudge the costs of the
RDRAMs. Whether that proves to be a transient
problem or a big mistake remains to be seen. There is
resistance, but I still expect in the long run that the
Rambus technology will be successful."

Still, he added, "One thing is clear: The memory market
will never be as homogenous as it was last year, when
SDRAMs dominated everything."

Slater said AMD appears to be hitting its Athlon
production targets, shipping about 800,000 in the fourth
quarter of 1999.

Steve Lapinski, director of product marketing at AMD,
confirmed that the company is able to meet demand.
The company's new fab in Dresden, Germany, is "on
track for production in the second half of 2000, using
copper" interconnects, he said. At a financial analysts
meeting in November, AMD demonstrated a
copper-based Athlon running at 900 MHz, he said.

Lapinski said the OEMs using the Athlon are planning
to transition to double-data-rate SDRAMs toward the
end of this year, rather than to RDRAMs.

"We have a Rambus agreement, but it is our customers
that really make the choice of what memory to
support," he said. "They have not been asking us to
support Rambus."

Confidence In Price Dip
Avo Kanadjian, who recently joined Rambus, in
Mountain View, Calif., as marketing vice president, said
he is confident the price premium for RDRAMs will
decline sharply in the next few months.

"I'm not too worried about the premiums," said
Kanadjian, who worked for Samsung Semiconductor in
marketing positions for seven years. "In this industry,
none of the major DRAM makers wants to be totally
dependent on one product, SDRAMs. There is always
pressure to lower the price per bit, and the same
situation will happen with Rambus DRAMs."

True price competition will start once multiple suppliers
go into production.

"Samsung clearly has the lead now, but a number of
others are ready to start mass production. They are
confident enough to go into mass production," he said.

The delays in Intel's 820 chip set, and RDRAM
manufacturing challenges, caused "everything to be
shifted by a quarter in terms of the price curve. If we
allow for that shift, things are still on track," Kanadjian
said.

Related Stories:



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)2/2/2000 9:05:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Feb 2 2000

During the company's conference call on January 13,
Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) announced it would spend $5 billion
on capital expenditures for the year 2000. Today, the
company is looking at $1.5 billion spent, $3.5 billion to
go.

Intel announced today it will purchase and refurbish a
fabrication facility from Rockwell International (NYSE:
ROK). Intel expects to spend $1.5 billion for the plant
and the refurbishing costs combined, although the
purchase price was not disclosed.

Intel purchased a total of 944,000 square feet for two
facilities. One, a 268,000 square foot building, will be
used for testing, while the second, at 676,000 square
feet, will be equipped to manufacture flash memory,
logic chips and other communications and networking
equipment, according to Intel.

The additional manufacturing capacity should help
alleviate some of the pressure the company has
received from its customers. Both Gateway (NYSE:
GTW) and Dell (Nasdaq: DELL) will have a disappointing
December quarter due to lack of supply from Intel. While
neither of the new facilities will manufacture
microprocessors, they will address the growing market
for flash memory. Flash memory is used in portable
devices such as cell phones, the demand for which is
strong.

Intel will install its 0.18-micron manufacturing technology
in the fabrication facility. Both new facilities are located
in Colorado Springs, Co., where the company expects to
employ 1000 people.

While the purchase of the facilities is a step in the right
direction, Intel will not see the benefits of the
acquisition until 2001 at the earliest. In the short term,
there will be no affect on meeting demand, but from
2001 the purchase will be part of Intel's natural upgrade
cycle. The move reinforces the belief that the
long-term prospects of the semiconductor industry
are extremely healthy.



To: Process Boy who wrote (88625)2/25/2000 9:15:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 186894
 
Intel To Cut Chip Prices Up To 25
Percent
(02/25/00, 7:40 p.m. ET) By Marcia Savage, Computer Reseller News

Intel next week is expected to cut prices of
its processors up to 25 percent, industry
sources said.

The chip giant, based in Santa Clara, Calif., will reduce
prices of its Pentium III and Celeron processors for
desktop PCs and its Pentium III Xeon chip for
workstations, sources said.

Discounts on the Pentium III chip will vary from
10percent to 25 percent, depending on frequency,
sources said. Reductions in the Pentium III Xeon line
are expected only for versions of the chip with smaller
cache sizes. No discounts are slated for processors for
mobile PCs, sources said.

The new prices are expected to take effect Sunday.
Intel declined to comment.

Intel, which routinely reduces processor prices, last
adjusted prices Jan. 23.