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Technology Stocks : Wind River going up, up, up! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Riskmgmt who wrote (6723)11/10/1999 1:38:00 PM
From: Snowshoe  Respond to of 10309
 
I presume WIND still owns LBRT. Hurrah for the post-MSFT era!!!

From Briefing.com...

12:58 ET Liberate Technologies (LBRT) 111 3/16 +32 11/16 (+42%) --Update-- Dain Rauscher Wessels starts coverage of the information appliance software developer with a "buy" rating and $94 price target... Also this morning, company announced that it and Cable & Wireless Communications have deployed world's first digital, two-way interactive cable TV service based on Internet standards.

12:53 ET Be Inc (BEOS) 16 5/8 +1 1/16 (+7%): Shares of recently highflying alternative operating system developer rally more than 30% off low of the morning and into positive territory... Volume heavy at 6.5 mln shares; intraday high 16 13/16.

09:54 ET Microware Systems (MWAR) 7 1/2 +3 13/16 (+103%): MWAR, which Briefing.com picked up late yesterday as a play on adverse Microsoft court ruling continues to run this morning. Stock has more than doubled on heavy volume of 1.18 mln shares. Last month, MWAR company announced that Motorola had selected its OS-9 32-bit real time operating system (RTOS) technology for the new Timeport P1088 smart phone.



To: Riskmgmt who wrote (6723)11/10/1999 2:13:00 PM
From: peter grossman  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 10309
 
Everything is coming together.

WIND has business and equity partnerships with Liberate and FlashPoint, and is aligned in these partnerships (and separately) with HP and AOL.

One can easily imagine digital images captured by Minolta cameras using FlashPoint technology scanned with HP scanners into Intel boxes using Intel communications chips and I2O. These images may then be communicated through Jetsend to Adobe postscript printers or sent via 3Com DSL or cable modems to Liberate driven set top boxes being browsed through AOL.

In other words, in 2001, take a picture of your kids send it to your parents, and count the royalties WIND receives.

At the same time Nortel slashes its router prices; WIND buys up the competition; the giant stumbles; and the stock begins its inexorable climb.

Fun times indeed.