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Technology Stocks : Novell (NOVL) dirt cheap, good buy? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PJ Strifas who wrote (28842)11/8/1999 9:59:00 PM
From: PJ Strifas  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 42771
 
Some good news :)

Peter

Novell Announces the Next NetWare for E-Business and Web-based Applications

NetWare 5.1 Will Open the Directory-based Server Operating System to Web-based Applications, Management and Resources

PROVO, Utah - Nov. 8, 1999 - Novell, Inc. today announced the worldwide release of the public beta of NetWare© 5.1, the next version of the company?s flagship, directory-based server operating system. NetWare 5.1, now in its third beta release and formerly known by the development code name of ?Cobra,? is widely available for use by customers, partners
and resellers. NetWare 5.1 will allow customers to take greater advantage of the growing trend toward using open, Web-based e-business applications, as well as Web-based network management and resources.

NetWare 5.1 will also allow customers to take greater advantage of Novell© Directory Services© with NDS© 8 to manage their entire heterogeneous network and beyond to the Internet.

?The next version of NetWare will be Novell?s most ambitious version of the product to date,? said Michael Bryant, director of NetWare product marketing. ?The strong reliability, scalability, performance and security that NetWare customers have come to expect from Novell will now
be coupled with Web-based applications, management and administration to help companies take greater advantage of the Internet than ever before.?

To further enhance NetWare 5.1 as a platform for developing Web-based applications, Novell is partnering with IBM to include both IBM WebSphere Application Server 3.0 Standard Edition and IBM WebSphere Studio 3.0 Entry Edition. Through this partnership, IBM will provide NetWare 5.1 customers with one of the industry?s leading Web application
servers and a complete, easy-to-use Web development tool set for creating and deploying dynamic Web-based applications. WebSphere Application Server 3.0 Standard Edition and Studio Entry Edition are part of the IBM WebSphere family of application servers and tools that provide NetWare 5.1 customers a growth path as their needs expand.

In addition, Novell is partnering with Oracle to include a 5-user version of Oracle8i along with the Web development tool Oracle WebDB to help customers develop and publish Web-based applications requiring integration with a full-featured database.

Beta testers of NetWare 5.1 have lauded NetWare?s stronger Internet ties for developing Web applications as well as managing their entire network. ?NetWare 5.1 truly opens my servers to the Web,? said Micah Cooper, network systems administrator at Miami University of Ohio. ?With support for Internet standards such as WebDAV, we can enable our faculty
to easily access their data when not in the office - even from other countries - without having to worry about properly configuring their client software. We?ve particularly taken advantage of Oracle WebDB on NetWare to allow us to easily create Web applications all on one
platform - all managed by one directory with Novell Directory Services.?

Support for Open Internet Standards Building on the support of pure IP in NetWare 5, NetWare 5.1 will continue to provide customers with a standards-based approach to network
computing. NetWare will natively support Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP), the protocol that Web servers and Web browsers use to communicate with each other on the Internet. Supporting HTTP will allow customers to serve up files from Microsoft Office 2000 Web folders as well as apply security and manageability controls to Web services using
Novell Directory Services.

NetWare 5 introduced one of the highest-performing Java Virtual Machines (JVMs) on the market and NetWare 5.1 will build upon this with an optimized JVM for companies serving up Java applications. While customers will take advantage of the full service directory capabilities of NDS 8, NetWare 5.1 includes native support for LDAP v3, the protocol
that allows customers to access directory information from many different directories.

NetWare and NDS 8 Help to Save Time and Resources
Novell brings eight years of directory leadership to NetWare 5.1 with NDS 8, the full-service directory for helping companies reduce complexity and manage their entire heterogeneous network. NDS 8 supports NetWare, Windows NT Server and 2000, Linux, Solaris Unix and IBM AIX.
Beyond networks, NDS 8 intelligence will soon cut across other technologies including routers, switches, digital signal processors and other network devices.

Dependable and Efficient Access to Business Networking Resources In an effort to provide customers with more secure access and control to their corporate networks, NetWare 5.1 will include the NetWare Management Portal?. The browser-based portal provides secure access to allow administrators to manage and monitor several aspects of their network including NDS, server status, health, identification of server problems and server setting configurations.

NetWare 5.1 Public Beta Availability and Pricing
Customers, partners and resellers may obtain a license to use the NetWare 5.1 public beta by contacting Novell at
novell.com or by calling 800-395-7135 in the United States or 925-463-7391 outside the United States. A license to use the software will also be included on the upcoming release of the Novell Software Evaluation Library?. The cost for the NetWare 5.1 beta
software license is US$15 plus shipping and applicable taxes. Pricing and availability of NetWare 5.1 will be announced at a later date.



To: PJ Strifas who wrote (28842)11/10/1999 1:40:00 PM
From: Scott C. Lemon  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 42771
 
Hello PJ,

There are very few ways that I can directly see religion effect my life. I have to admit that I'm not a very active participant now ... but was raised in a household that went to church every Sunday.

I sometimes reflect on the various things that I learned there, and have to admit that I really dislike some of the "rules" that I was taught. For example, when someone really screws me over, I'd love to really one-up them! I'd love to get even and more ...

... but that's not what I was taught.

> And yet you conviently leave out this company you are so willing to
> defend actually practiced this same behavior!?! Did we forget the
> "Kill Phillipe" shirts worn by MSFT people (in reference to
> Phillipe Kahn) during the late '80s?

No ... I didn't conviently leave out anything. And no ... I don't defend the behavior (in the context of it being "right"). But I will argue against the mob-mentality, the unthinking rage.

I guess that in your house, the excuse of "... but s/he hit me first!" stands up? I guess that your children (if you have some) are taught that it's ok to "Do unto others, as other have done unto you."?

I don't know ... I was taught some other hard lessons. I know they are sometimes difficult to live with ...

Do unto others, as you would have others do unto you.

If you're going to suggest that we exact a toll on Microsoft, just make sure it's one that you would live with if exacted on you! ;-)

Scott C. Lemon

(P.S. You examples of pricing aren't quite on target. I still pay ~$2000 for a full PC ... same as 10 years ago. I still pay the same for a hard disk, since the "pennies per MB" are offset my the billions of bytes I'm buying. And no matter what you want to argue, Windows is a much more full featured OS, providing much more functionality, than the Windows v1.0 that I got in the early '80s. I'm getting much more for my money ...)