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To: Don Green who wrote (35923)12/17/1999 12:44:00 PM
From: Orion  Respond to of 93625
 
Intel is DEAD !!!
No customers anymore, as you can see below ...

quote.bloomberg.com

Intel Takes Steps to Boost Production at Several U.S. Locations
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Intel Takes Steps to Boost Production at Several U.S. Locations

Santa Clara, California, Dec. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Intel Corp.,
the world's biggest semiconductor maker, is taking steps to boost
production at several plants in the U.S. as demand for its
microprocessors and others products rises.

The company is reopening a plant in Aloha, Oregon, to make
memory chips. It's spending $800 million to renovate a plant in
Hudson, Massachusetts, and has filed for permits to build a new
plant near Chandler, Arizona. No decision has been made on
whether to build in Chandler, a spokesman said.

Intel is struggling to meet demand for microprocessors right
now as more people buy personal computers to get on the Internet.
It's also selling more flash-memory chips, which retain
information even when the power in a device is turned off. The
chips are crucial for making mobile phones and electronic
organizers.
``We're in the process of evaluating our capacity plans,'
Intel spokesman Chuck Mulloy said of the Chandler permits.

Intel already has two plants in Chandler, near Phoenix.
``We're looking at other sites' too, Mulloy said.

The company is moving ahead with plans to reopen the Aloha
plant, just west of Portland, to make flash memory. The factory
was built in 1978 and mothballed in 1998.

Flash memory, based on technology Intel invented, is one of
the fastest-growing parts of the semiconductor market. Flash
sales are expected to rise 63 percent to $4.1 billion this year,
according to the Semiconductor Industry Association.

Upgrading Hudson

Intel unveiled the investment plan for the Hudson,
Massachusetts, plant today. It bought the factory from Digital
Equipment Corp. in May 1998 as part of a settlement of patent
litigation with Digital. Intel runs all of its ``fabs' with the
same machines and processes, and the Hudson plant has to be
brought up to the same standards as the others, Mulloy said.

Intel plans to spend $800 million on the plant in the next
two years and will add 450 jobs there, Mulloy said. The plant is
where Intel is making its new Network Processor, which is
designed to run computer networking equipment.

Intel has 12 plants now making chips around the world.

The company said in late October that it would meet all
commitments to sell chips to customers, even though supplies of
the products were ``tight' because of rising demand.

Shares of the Santa Clara, California-based company rose
1 5/16 to 80 1/4 today. They've risen 35 percent this year.

Intel's plans to reopen the plant in Oregon were reported
earlier by the Oregonian newspaper. The company's request for
permits in Arizona was reported earlier by the Mesa Tribune.