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To: Windseye who wrote (71245)11/8/1999 12:07:00 AM
From: Captain Jack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
Doug,,
This does not indicate <" In other words the pitch may be falling on deaf ears."> And CPQ could use a lot of these accounts that DELL pubicizes....

NEW YORK, Nov 8 (Reuters) - Dell Computer Corp. <DELL.O> on
Monday will unveil a contract worth up to $100 million to be
the exclusive supplier of personal computers to First Union
Corp. <FTU.N>, the nation's No. 6 largest bank, the latest in a
string of such corporate contracts for Dell.
The three-year deal calls for the the world's No. 2
personal computer maker to replace First Union's 65,000
computers with a standard set of Dell's desktop, deskside or
notebook computers.
Dell, which recently moved up to become the No. 1 seller of
PCs in the United States due in part to a surge in corporate
contracts, will replace computer reseller Inacom Corp. <ICO.N>
as First Union's previous computer supplier, the bank said.
First Union may extend the contract to include Dell's
servers, the most powerful category of personal computers,
which typically are used to manage networks of other PCs, once
these Dell machines are certified to handle the banking
company's requirements, a First Union executive said.
Ann Przygocki, First Union, vice president and manager of
its desktop services group said the contract began Aug. 9, but
the company did not want to publicize it until it was ready to
begin ordering Dell systems in volume.
The contract with First Union is one of about 10 the Round
Rock, Texas-based computer maker has scored within the past
year with a major company seeking to standardize their
computers, Dell spokesman Andy North said. Others deals include
Boeing Co. <BA.N>, Motorola Inc. <MOT.N>, and Ford.
By standardizing on Dell PCs, the Charlotte, N.C.-based
banking and brokerage company said it expects to save about 30
percent over the life of the contract through Dell's simplified
ordering process. That does not include savings on training
staff to use the machines and on servicing the systems.
((Ilaina Jonas, New York Newsdesk, 212-859-1676))
REUTERS