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Strategies & Market Trends : Cents and Sensibility - Kimberly and Friends' Consortium -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 2MAR$ who wrote (74601)2/11/2000 10:28:00 PM
From: SKARLOEY  Respond to of 108040
 
RNTK can be a tricky stock , it will be huge and I MEAN HUGE, if all the pieces come together, but they have disappointed me so often i swore i would never reenter the arena with them , well i did the other day and am currently holding a small position. things may have finally turned the corner with the analysts ("approving" of them?), well it could be poised to hit the $5 mark near term, so i will hold and watch carefully, good luck to anyone in it...



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (74601)2/12/2000 6:04:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 108040
 
Linux will get hot again.......Cookie cutter ready for Linux offerings
CSFB tech head sees 10 open source IPOs in 2000

By Brenon Daly, CBS MarketWatch
Last Update: 7:53 PM ET Feb 8, 2000
Pulse Report

NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- Wall Street loves a tried-and-true idea.

Given the huge rises in Linux companies' shares in 1999, we can expect
about 10 initial public offerings from open-source companies this year,
says Mike Kwatinetz, head of technology research at Credit Suisse First
Boston.



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (74601)2/12/2000 3:02:00 PM
From: Mike E.  Respond to of 108040
 
Don't you know that these "tech stocks" are over valued?

:+)

Great write up of the the beginning impact on QCOM's CDMA technology on the Asian market. I love QCOM!

(COMTEX) B: China-Qualcomm CDMA deal aids Korean players
B: China-Qualcomm CDMA deal aids Korean players

Feb. 11, 2000 (Electronic Engineering Times - CMP via COMTEX) --
SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA - Qualcomm Inc.'s framework licensing agreement with
China Unicom unveiled in early February could also be a boon for South
Korean equipment and service providers entering the Chinese market with
code-division multiple access (CDMA) technology licensed from Qualcomm.

China Unicom, China's second-largest state-owned telecommunications
carrier, is expected to select equipment providers by the end of
February.

The South Korean government and industry each view Qualcomm's entry
into China with a CDMA licensing deal as the key that will launch the
success of the standard in Asia and begin the globalization of South
Korea's CDMA industry. Domestic service and equipment providers have
struggled to enter the Chinese market since 1998.

South Korea was the first country to commercialize CDMA technology,
and manufacturers said the China Unicom deal could open the way to
greater exports of mobile telecommunications equipment.

South Korean manufacturers are especially keen to dominate the mobile
handset market, the key segment of the CDMA industry. They also see a
partnership with China Unicom as a way to strengthen relationships with
Chinese customers, leading to greater exports of CDMA services and
equipment. Already, Shinsegi Telecom, a South Korean mobile handset
operator, has agreed to transfer its international automatic roaming
and system operating solutions to China Telecom.

Mobile service in China

LG Information & Communication, a domestic equipment maker, has also
begun to provide commercial mobile handset service in Guangzhou, China.
LG said it set up a joint CDMA wireless local-loop production and sales
company in Guangzhou, called LG-TOPS Communication Technologies Co. The
company is now looking for another partner to establish a mobile
handset production line in Beijing.

Meanwhile, Samsung Electronics won a Chinese CDMA equipment pact. "We
will devote all our energies to expanding the marketing for the mobile
telecom market in China, and also to [supply] the market for CDMA
handsets as well as equipment," said a Samsung spokesman.- Exclusive to
EE Times by Chom Dan Publishing Inc. (Seoul, South Korea).

eetimes.com


-0-

By: Yoonhee Park
Copyright 2000 CMP Media Inc.

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