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To: Joe Wagner who wrote (1609)11/14/1999 3:48:00 PM
From: Joe Wagner  Respond to of 4808
 
Personal Jukebox
81 Hours approx 1200 tunes (100 CD's) with 4.86GB HDD
Included "Jukebox Manger" software allows for Easy Music Organization
Using licensed technologies from Compaq, Thompson, and Fraunhofer, the PJB 100 provides the ultimate flexibility of digital audio capture, via CD?s or Internet, in current MP3 digital audio format. Further, the Personal Juke Box can be upgraded to process multiple, new, and secure digital audio standards.

Remote Solution?s PJB 100 stores over 80 playback hours (1200 songs), and incorporates an IBM 4.86 gigabyte, 2.5 inch hard drive selected for its rugged reliability. The PJB 100 equates to less than$10 per playback hour vs. $250 per playback hour for flash-media storage units.




To: Joe Wagner who wrote (1609)11/15/1999 1:14:00 PM
From: J Fieb  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4808
 
A little bit on Exodus.........

techweb.com

Ellen Hancock: Hostess of the Hosting Market

Multitasking is the name of the game in Internet hosting, and nobody plays the game with as much strategy or with more panache than Exodus Communications Inc. CEO Ellen Hancock.

Since coming to Exodus in 1997 from the chief technology officer spot at Apple Computer Inc., she has guided Exodus' enormously successful initial public offering, acquisitions of several complementary e-service businesses, partnering with nearly 200 vendors and growth of more than 40 percent each quarter.

At the same time, this 29-year IBM Corp. veteran has captained an army of people who run hosting data centers in seven U.S. metropolitan areas and London. No rest for Hancock or Exodus: Four more data centers and three international server hosting sites will be up by year's end, bringing the total to 22.

In addition to all of those accomplishments, Hancock has pushed research and development at Exodus, driving the release of new hosting offerings, such as Security Services Pack and ReadyCache Content Distribution Service. It's all part of her complex mission to make "the Internet an integral part of mission-critical enterprises," she says.

-Jan Stafford

Ellen Hancock

CEO

Exodus Communications Inc.

www.exodus.com

ASPs for the BIG technology dogs.........

techweb.com

ASP Supply Chain -- Ford, Oracle Bombshell
David Myron

NEW YORK-Oracle Corp.'s joint venture last week with Ford Motor Co. thrusts the software giant squarely into the application service provider (ASP) and Web hosting markets. At the same time, Oracle was unable to explain how VARs might benefit, leading to some fear they will be left in the dust.

AutoXchange, the first automotive e-business integrated supply chain, will help Ford and its suppliers minimize expenses through streamlined sourcing of vehicle components. Eventually, the company will automate its entire purchase process. AutoXchange will also extend Ford's core business into an e-business enterprise, allowing consumers access to the supply chain.

Through the agreement, Oracle will provide the software, implementation and support, as well as host and manage AutoXchange, making Oracle a major ASP. Presumably, the integration will be done through its Oracle Consulting Services (VARBusiness 500 rank: 10).

Some wonder how carefully the joint venture was thought out, however.

"Oracle doesn't have a fleshed-out strategy," says a source. "It's so new, it doesn't know what the implications are for resellers. I don't think it even knows what the opportunities are."

But, John Repko, vice president of operations for Oracle Business OnLine (BOL), says, "The potential for partnering with Oracle is much greater than the potential for conflict."

E-business consultants and systems integrators seem to take a dim view of such incentives and are convinced they can be successful ASPs on their own.

For example, Larry Kurtz is looking to transition his businesses into the ASP market next quarter by providing Web hosting services. "If that's the business Oracle is going after, it's now my competitor," says Kurtz, president of Aspen Consulting Inc., an e-business consultant based in Rolling Meadows, Ill. "But, there's a lot of business out there. I'd rather go after the small to midsize companies. The more you can help them grow their companies, the more successful we both will be."

Some ASP revenue opportunities Kurtz is considering through Web hosting are video on demand, linking credit card transactions to accounting, and warehouse applications.

Barbara Reilly agrees. The research director of e-business transformation at Gartner Group Inc., Cambridge, Mass., isn't convinced Oracle's one-size-fits-all strategy will work, for small businesses especially. She says they are mostly concerned with Oracle's ability to provide a customized and scalable software solution for each company.

"If I were a systems integrator, I would be looking to align myself with an ASP. You can with Oracle, but Oracle is not going to be the predominant ASP moving forward," she says. Reilly suggests that resellers watch what Intel Corp., IBM Corp. and Microsoft Corp. will offer, as they are competing in the same market.

Come'on FC do your stuff.