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Strategies & Market Trends : Gorilla and King Portfolio Candidates -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: MulhollandDrive who wrote (8317)10/14/1999 7:59:00 PM
From: Robert S.  Respond to of 54805
 
I have seen GMST mentioned several times on this board as a potential gorilla but I don't recall many posts about other players, such as IATV, in this arena. The linked article may be of interest and an excerpt follows:

I want my IATV

Several readers, led exuberantly by a psychology grad student named Dave Taragan, proposed ACTV (IATV) as
a potential 100-bagger. It's a digital media company whose patented software finally may fulfill the promise of
interactive television. ACTV's software allows television and cable broadcasters to combine multiple, real-time
feeds of video, audio and data into a single signal beamed at every home equipped with a special Web browser
plug-in. It lets TV viewers enjoy a highly personalized relationship with shows -- from viewing sports replay angles
of their choice to point-and-click purchase of beer, toys and other items directly from ads. The Showtime division
of Viacom (VIA) and some Fox Sports Network channels already are experimenting with this stuff, which appears
to hasten the convergence of television and the Internet. Says Taragan: "At the dawn of the personal computer
revolution, IBM (IBM) made the box, Intel made the chip and Microsoft made the software. Now as we face the
digital television/Internet revolution, General Instrument (GIC), Scientific-Atlanta (SFA) and Sony make the box,
or set-top computer; Broadcom (BRCM) makes the chip; and ACTV makes the software. The convergence of
TV and the Web is going to result in the most critical applications you ever saw, ranging from individualized
mass-market advertising, impulse e-commerce buying; distance learning; interactive game shows; sports wagering
and anything else you might want to do from your couch. ACTV owns the patents that makes this all possible; it is
positioned for greatness."

Trailing 12-month revenues are a paltry $2 million, while 12-month losses are up to $27 million. But before you
dismiss this company as just another nutty interactive television venture, consider that major shareholders include
the Washington Post (WPO), which is itself largely controlled by Warren Buffett, cable pioneer John Malone's
Liberty Media Group (LMGA), General Instrument, hedge-fund titan Paul Tudor Jones and the Janus mutual fund
complex.

boards.fool.com