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Technology Stocks : 3Com Corporation (COMS) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Captain Jack who wrote (37948)1/6/2000 9:00:00 AM
From: Paul Haynie  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 45548
 
Eric Benhamou
Chairman & CEO
3Com {COMS}

on CNBC's Power Lunch 12-2

I cant wait ;)

paul



To: Captain Jack who wrote (37948)1/6/2000 9:01:00 AM
From: jas cooper  Respond to of 45548
 
after GTW all techs will be hit early,,

Just the boxmakers. Other techs will likely follow (or lead) the market.



To: Captain Jack who wrote (37948)1/6/2000 12:29:00 PM
From: mr.mark  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 45548
 
from tsc...

"10 Things You Need to Know:
PC, R.I.P.: The New Kids Are in
Town
By Eric Moskowitz
Senior Writer
1/6/00 10:36 AM ET

This story is part of a
weeklong series that looks at
the top 10 trends to help you
invest in the coming year.
Click on the tile at left to see
other stories.

In 2000, investing in the PC market means looking
everywhere but at the PC.

Products such as Research In Motion's
(RIMM:Nasdaq - news) email-accessible pager and
Casio's Cassiopeia handheld organizer are the hot
sellers, and they enable people to take a PC's
functions anywhere. And these days, that's
seemingly what everyone wants.

Companies that offer this capability -- or even a
promise to do so -- are winning in the marketplace
and the stock market. Last year, the Dow Jones
Computer Peripherals Index shot up 132%,
compared with a 45% return for the Dow Jones
Computer Hardware Index.

At the other end of this
PC spectrum are
enterprise computing
companies called
application service providers, or ASPs -- companies
that offer Internet-based software or Web-hosting
programs to companies. Names such as Viant
(VIAN:Nasdaq - news) and SilverStream
(SSSW:Nasdaq - news) became ASP highfliers,
rising 306% and 381%, respectively, last year.

"Our investment thesis is that the profits in the
computer industry are moving above and below the
PC -- above into enterprise computing and below
into information appliances," says Steve Milunovich,
a hardware analyst in Merrill Lynch's technology
group.

For PC makers, all this means tougher times ahead
as their actual boxes become less crucial.

Keeping Up

Of course, some PC companies are trying to evolve.
Dell (DELL:Nasdaq - news), for instance, partnered
with Research In Motion, maker of the de rigueur
Blackberry pager-plus favored by corporate
executives who need their email no matter what
their latitude.

Some PC
makers are
getting into this
market on their
own, too.
Compaq
(CPQ:CPQ -
news) makes
the Aero, and
Hewlett-Packard
(HWP:Nasdaq -
news) the
Jornada, both
essentially
handheld PCs.

Compaq's Aero, H-P's Jornada and Casio's
Cassiopeia sold out in the fourth quarter, says
Michael Kwatinetz, an analyst at Credit Suisse
First Boston. (His firm has done no underwriting for
Compaq or H-P.)

On the enterprise computing side, H-P will
exchange computer equipment for revenue from
communications networker Qwest's
(QWST:Nasdaq - news) ASP unit.

The problem is that all these ventures are still
relatively small for these companies, which means
they won't make much of a dent in the bottom line
for some time. In fact, Merrill's Milunovich doesn't
even include handheld sales when putting together
his boxmaker earnings models.

Small Items, Big Growth

Instead, the real growth is coming for companies
such as 3Com's (COMS:Nasdaq - news) Palm
Computing unit, which 3Com expects to spin off
this year. Then there's privately held Handspring,
run by the Palm co-founders. Its Visor handheld
computer has seen overwhelming demand.
Handspring is considering going public.


Bypassing the PC by using cellular phones with
Internet connections is also gaining momentum.
Phone.com (PHCM:Nasdaq - news), which sells
software for the delivery of Internet-based services
to wireless phones, is benefiting from this trend and
has plenty of company, including Ericsson
(ERICY:Nasdaq ADR - news) and Wireless
Knowledge, a joint venture between Microsoft
(MSFT:Nasdaq - news) and Qualcomm
(QCOM:Nasdaq - news).

Then there's the enterprise software business,
including big names such as Sun Microsystems
(SUNW:Nasdaq - news) and EMC (EMC:NYSE -
news), as well as smaller firms like
USinternetworking (USIX:Nasdaq - news) and
SilverStream. This business is a threat to PC
makers because it can force them to churn out
cheap boxes that do little more than attach to the
Net, says Sam Albert, president of the PC
consulting firm Sam Albert Associates.

Never Fear, the PC Is Here

PC makers say they're up to the challenge.

"We are entering a big space of utility computing,
so we aren't that concerned yet about our
competition," says Nick Earle, chief marketing
officer for H-P's enterprise computing division. "The
key word for us is going to be mobility. By
partnering with Qwest on the back end and
companies like Swatch on the front end, we feel we
will have a lot of that." H-P signed a deal late last
year with the Swiss watchmaker to turn its watches
into Internet appliances.

It's unclear whether Dick Tracy-like wristwatch Net
surfing or cell phones that can download War and
Peace will be a trend that affects the boxmakers'
bottom line. But those that fail to acknowledge the
move away from the desktop PC will find upstarts
such as SilverStream, Palm Computing and
Research In Motion eating away at their market
share.
"