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To: Tony Viola who wrote (90901)10/25/1999 11:56:00 AM
From: AJ Berger  Respond to of 186894
 



To: Tony Viola who wrote (90901)10/25/1999 1:04:00 PM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Tony & Intel Investors - Sun Microsystems Has Solaris Up And Running on the REAL Itanium/Merced hardware systems.

Sun Solaris Now Running On Intel's 64-Bit Itanium Processor

Note that this is a SUN Microsystems press release - proclaiming their successes !

Paul

{=======================================}
biz.yahoo.com

Monday October 25, 12:08 pm Eastern Time
Company Press Release

Sun Solaris Now Running On Intel's 64-Bit Itanium Processor

PALO ALTO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 25, 1999--Sun Microsystems announced today that the Solaris(TM) Operating Environment is running on engineering prototype systems based on Intel's Itanium processor. The milestone was reached during Sun's designated testing sessions at Intel's labs in Beaverton, Oregon. Working together, Sun Solaris and Intel Itanium engineers successfully transmitted an email message over the Internet from the prototype system running the Solaris Operating Environment.

''With Solaris now running on the Itanium processor, Sun has achieved another key milestone on our IA-64 road map,'' said Rich Green, vice president, Solaris Products Group, Sun Microsystems. ''Working closely with Intel, during our scheduled testing session, Sun has demonstrated that the Solaris Operating Environment is ready for the Itanium processor.''

Formerly code-named Merced, Itanium will be the first product in Intel's IA-64 family, and is designed to address the increasing demands that the Internet economy places on e-Businesses.

Solaris: The 64-Bit Proven Operating Environment

Sun is leveraging its 64-bit Solaris Operating Environment, in the optimization of Solaris for Intel's IA-64 processor. The Solaris Application Programming Interface (API) and Device Driver Interface (DDI) are common across all Solaris platforms, meaning that ISVs that develop 64-bit applications today on Solaris SPARC Platform Edition can easily migrate these same applications to the Itanium platform by simply recompiling their application or driver. In addition, the Sun WorkShop development products provide a consistent software development environment across all Solaris supported platforms, delivering constant reliability and ease-of-use for developers.

Solaris: Protecting Customer Investments

To protect customer investments, the Solaris Operating Environment will provide full compatibility on Itanium with many of the more than 3,500 Solaris Intel Platform Edition applications that are available today. This means that many ISVs with applications that do not require 64-bit addressing or the full Itanium performance do not have to change or recompile their existing 32-bit Solaris on Intel applications to take advantage of Itanium.

For more information about Solaris and 64-bit computing, visit the Sun web site at sun.com.

Solaris 7 Product Line

The Solaris 7 Operating Environment is reliable, highly scalable, Year 2000 compliant, and delivers expanded capabilities for workgroups, data centers and Internet Service Providers who need ''anytime, anywhere'' access to computing resources. The Solaris 7 product line is the best network computing environment to support the business demands of today and the business innovations of tomorrow.

About Sun Microsystems, Inc.

Since its inception in 1982, a singular vision, ''The Network is the ComputerTM,'' has propelled Sun Microsystems, Inc., (Nasdaq:SUNW - news), to its position as a leading provider of hardware, software and services for establishing enterprise-wide intranets and expanding the power of the Internet. With more than $11.5 billion in annual revenues, Sun can be found in more than 150 countries and on the World Wide Web at sun.com.

Sun, the Sun logo, Sun Microsystems, Solaris, Sun WorkShop and The Network Is the Computer are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries. All SPARC trademarks are used under license and are trademarks or registered trademarks of SPARC International, Inc. in the United States and other countries. Products bearing SPARC trademarks are based upon an architecture developed by Sun Microsystems, Inc.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contact:

Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Mike Shuster, 650/786-9037
michael.shuster@sun.com
or
GCI Group for Sun Microsystems
Penelope Favor, 415/974-7233
pfavor@gcigroup.com




To: Tony Viola who wrote (90901)10/25/1999 1:07:00 PM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 186894
 
Tony & Intel Investors - Dell Surpasses Compaq in U.S. PC Sales !!!

Dell topples Compaq in U.S. market share

Does this say something about the benefits of being an ALL INTEL House - as opposed to Compaq's - cheap-at-any-cost approach ?

Paul

{======================================}
Dell topples Compaq in U.S. market share

By Stephen Shankland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
October 25, 1999, 4:20 a.m. PT
URL: news.cnet.com
update Dell Computer has pushed aside Compaq Computer for the top spot in PC market share--at least in the United States.

The so-called direct sales PC manufacturer has stolen the leading role in the world's largest market away from the longtime front-runner for the first time, according to studies to be released today by market research firms International Data Corporation and Dataquest.

Dell edged out Compaq in the U.S., according Dell surges in U.S. market
Dell Computer had a larger share of the computer market than rival Compaq in the third quarter. Here's how the market broke down.
Company 3Q '99 Market share 3Q '98 Rank (and share)
1. Dell 17.1% 2. (13.4%)
2. Compaq 15.3% 1. (15.0%)
3. Gateway 9.3% 5. (8.2%)
4. HP 8.2% 4. (8.4%)
5. IBM 7.6% 3. (8.9%)
Source: Dataquest
to final second-quarter numbers released by IDC last month. But Dell widened the margin in the third quarter, grabbing the top spot for the first time from both market-research firms.

Compaq held on to the No. 1 spot worldwide, but analysts predicted that Dell soon would push its Texas rival aside in that category too.

More broadly, third 1999's third-quarter statistics read like Exhibit A for the direct sales method. Dell grew more than two times faster than both the U.S. and worldwide markets, while Gateway clipped along at more than 1.5 times the market.

By contrast, Compaq and Hewlett-Packard about kept pace with the entire PC market while IBM grew about half as fast, in terms of the number of computers shipped. All three companies continue to sell a substantial number of PCs through retailers and resellers. Two years ago, many of the traditional manufacturers were growing at faster than the market.

The news comes on the eve of Compaq's third-quarter earnings announcement. The company is expected to report a 5 cent per-share profit, or $85 million, according to a consensus estimate by First Call. That estimate is before about a $900 million charge for restructuring, which includes up to 8,000 employee layoffs and facility closings.

In the United States, Dell shipped about 2 million of the 11.7 million PCs sold in the third calendar quarter, giving the Round Rock, Texas, company a market share of 17.1 percent, Dataquest said. Compaq, with 1.8 million computers shipped, had 15.3 percent of the market.

"They are No. 1, finally. Last quarter, it was kind of a virtual tie between the two. This time, it's for real," said IDC analyst John Brown.

"Dell has been putting its product portfolio together piece by piece, expanding on manufacturing efficiencies, and working on its Web delivery. They've been slowly putting each stone in place, and they've built a pretty solid house over there."

For its part, Compaq has been hurt by transitions in management and its portable computer lineup, Brown added.

Compaq's slip to the number two rank "was expected, but may spook some," said Morgan Stanley Dean Witter analyst Gillian Munson in a report Friday.

The next finishers were IBM, Hewlett-Packard, and Gateway, with 7.6 percent, 6.2 percent, and 4.3 percent of the U.S. market, respectively, according to Dataquest.

Worldwide, Compaq retained the top spot with 13.8 percent of the 15.3 million computers shipped, but its growth rate of 20 percent was less than the overall market growth of 25 percent, according to IDC. Dell's growth, by comparison, was 59 percent. IDC's numbers vary from Dataquest's because IDC counts so-called PC servers into the total while Dataquest does not.

The direct sellers outgrew those whose PC sales come primarily through stores, the figures show. Direct sellers Dell and Gateway saw worldwide sales grow 62 percent and 40 percent respectively, according to Dataquest. HP and Compaq, not predominantly direct sellers, had growth of 30 and 18 percent, respectively, where as IBM, with almost no direct sales, had growth of 12 percent.

"Slower growth rates from the traditionally indirect vendors Compaq, HP, and IBM point toward a renewed focus on profitability rather than market share at any cost," said Dataquest's Charles Smulders in a statement.

All the PC makers, and Dell Compaq still tops internationally
Compaq maintained the lead in international market share.
Company 3Q '99 Market share 3Q '98 Rank (and share)
1. Compaq 12.8% 1. (13.4%)
2. Dell 10.8% 3. (8.2%)
3. IBM 7.6% 2. (8.4%)
4. HP 6.2% 4. (5.9%)
5. Gateway 4.3% 5. (3.8%)
Source: Dataquest
in particular, were hurt by rising memory prices. "Clearly a business environment where component prices rise does not fit the high velocity business model used in the PC industry," said Smulders.

Nonetheless, IDC pointed out that HP's growth was sustained by sales of its retail Pavillion line. One of the hallmarks of HP's retail line is its low cost. The company's hottest-selling computers typically sell for less than $800, according to monthly polls from PC Data. Compaq and HP also enjoyed growth because of ISP rebate deals. "The fight isn't over. I'm sure they're going to give it a thrill next quarter," Brown said. "Compaq does play in the retail market, and it is a retail quarter."

Apple also has cheery prospects next quarter, largely because of the unfulfilled demand for G4 and iBook computers, Brown said. "They may come in at sixth or seventh place in the U.S., seventh or eighth worldwide. It's definitely something to look for in the fourth quarter," he said.

Packard Bell/NEC isn't doing as well. The company's shipments dropped 6 percent compared to the same quarter the year before, IDC said. "They're being carried by NEC in Japan," Brown said.

IBM and Compaq did very well in Asia, Brown said. However, in the United States, IBM slipped from third place last year to fifth this year as it struggles to figure out how to sell home-oriented machines, IDC said. Last week, IBM announced it would begin to sell almost all its home computers directly to customers instead of through stores.

Among other findings this quarter:

• Asia/Pacific was the fastest-growing region, with 38 percent growth. Japan was second with 37 percent growth, according to IDC.
• Worldwide, 27.9 million PCs, laptops, and servers were shipped in the third quarter of 1999.
• The top five companies accounted for nearly 60 percent of U.S. sales and 45 percent of international sales.