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Technology Stocks : Dell Technologies Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: rudedog who wrote (143186)9/29/1999 5:59:00 PM
From: D.J.Smyth  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176387
 
also, rude, on 6/22/99 Giga reported "Dell Most Trusted Vendor in U.S." in a report.

The current report was actually released two weeks ago. Giga then retracted the entire report after conversations with Dell (company was unable to substantiate their audacious claims). Today they post the report again without first contacting Dell to discuss the data.

Now how the heck could Dell go from "The Most Trusted" to Vendor Watch less than 60 to 70 days later (assuming they compiled their data in July/August for reporting in September) - surely you know how long it takes for accurate information to flow from operations and into the public. And it's rarely 60 to 70 days - especially given the complex nature of the data in which Dell is moving. It is generally more like six months for breakdowns to become fully evident. And currently there is no such solid data (IDC and the Gartner Group uses actual numbers on actual parts, not hollistic feel good surveys over the internet which, by the way, can be manipulated by one party if that party has access to numerous posting sites - thus balancing the scale against) available from the respectable organizations to show that Dell's service is subpar.

Does this sound like a company who has IT managers best interest in mind?



To: rudedog who wrote (143186)9/29/1999 6:19:00 PM
From: Sam Bose  Respond to of 176387
 
The Coming Server Boom

ANALYSIS

Sep 29 1999 3:32PM ET More on Winners and Losers...

Cashing in on the Coming Server Boom
by Hal Plotkin, Silicon Valley Correspondent, CNBC

If you know what to look for, you can cash in on the projected boom in sales of computer servers designed for homes and small businesses.

"We?re on the verge of what I call the Internet?s fourth wave," says Michael Kwatinetz, managing director at Credit Suisse First Boston, based in New York. "It?s going to lead to even stronger demand for servers."

As Kwatinetz sees it, three previous waves have already swept over the Internet: the advent of online communications; the availability of news and entertainment content; and the rise of e-commerce. All of these things have contributed to strong demand for computer servers, which are the machines that store and serve data either within a company or over the Internet.

The next major wave, Kwatinetz says, will be the widespread distribution of digital products, such as music and video, over the Internet.

"We?re in the early stages of that right now," he says. "But you can already see what?s going to happen. An average music CD is 500 megabytes. If someone has 200 albums, that?s 100 gigabytes, or about 10 times what the latest PCs can handle. We?re going to need a lot of new machines to store all that data."

Dataquest vice president Kimball Brown agrees, saying the computer industry is rapidly moving past the idea of a PC in every home and small business and toward the concept of a computer server in every home and small business.

Brown, for one, already has a server in his home. "It makes a lot of sense to me," he says. "There?s no question in my mind there?s going to be a need for more on-premises equipment."

Brown says he doesn?t think consumers will want to store many of their largest files on servers owned by Internet service providers, or other companies.

"There are issues with speed, caching, and quality," he says. For those reasons, Brown says, consumers and businesses will almost certainly purchase ever-increasing numbers of servers to assure more immediate access to their data.

That?s music to the ears of server makers. Four companies, Compaq Computer Corp. {CPQ}, IBM {IBM}, Hewlett-Packard Co. {HWP}, and Dell Computer Corp. {DELL}, currently dominate the market for general-purpose computer servers, according to Dataquest.

Company
Q1/98
Market Share
Q1/99
Market Share

Compaq
25.9%
29.5%

IBM
12.9%
16.5%

Hewlett-Packard
12.9%
12.6%

Dell
7.3%
9.0%

Others
41.0%
32.3%

Source: Dataquest

The annual market for general-purpose computer servers is projected to exceed $52 billion by 2002, up from $45.3 billion last year, according to Dataquest.

That, however, is only the beginning. Just 5,000 servers will be sold to home users this year. But by 2003, Brown says, sales of servers for the home will experience a very dramatic upswing. "That?s when it will really start kicking in," he adds.

Brown says investors should keep an eye on server market-share revenue figures. "The companies that are growing revenues are going to be the big winners," he adds.

Brown is particularly optimistic about Dell and Gateway Inc. {GTW}, companies that specialize in the direct marketing of computers, despite the fact that neither firm is currently leading in server sales.

"Gateway?s got an interesting way of selling these things," Brown says. "You can expect them to play [in the home-server market]. No question about it."

Likewise, Brown says, Dell is well-positioned to become one of the strongest vendors of high-end network attached storage devices, another segment of the server market. "Dell can sell high-end stuff really cheap. That?s going to help them build market share," he adds.

In fact, some analysts say prices charged to end-users for computer servers, particularly those sold to small businesses, will probably drop even more rapidly than personal computer prices have fallen. Manufacturers, of course, will still make money selling servers. But many of the largest server buyers will, in all likelihood, choose to give away the boxes to end-users.

That?s because cheap servers are expected to help create an entirely new class of

online-business services, everything from accounting to inventory control. Businesses using those services will get the boxes free or at a nominal cost in exchange for paying an annual subscription fee.

"Free PC schemes eke along because Internet-access fees barely subsidize the cost of the box," Matthew M. Nordan, an analyst at Forrester Research, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, wrote in a recent research report. "But server vendors that bundle appliances with high-speed Internet access, e-mail services, and remotely hosted applications to completely automate a small business will re-energize the concept."