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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: SunSpot who wrote (39114)3/7/2000 8:02:00 AM
From: SIer formerly known as Joe B.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 74651
 
This will be huge:

Microsoft to Introduce Game Console

SEATTLE, Mar 07, 2000 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- Microsoft Corp.'s new
video game system, expected to be unveiled at a game technology
conference on Friday, will have the power of a high-end gaming system
and the flexibility of a personal computer.

Sources close to the project, dubbed 'Xbox' by company insiders, told
The Associated Press Monday that the game consoles themselves would be
based on the same components that power personal computers.

The devices will contain hard drives and memory components similar to
those of PCs, as well as the same microprocessors that power high-end
personal computers. The consoles will also be Internet-compatible,
allowing users to take part in multiplayer games with people around the
country.

The sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the console and
games would be 'competitively priced,' with the Nintendo 64, Sony
PlayStation2 and Sega Dreamcast. The system is not likely to reach
store shelves until 2001.

Microsoft declined to comment, other than to note that company chairman
Bill Gates is to address the Game Developers Conference in San Jose,
Calif., on Friday.

The San Jose Mercury News reported Monday that the game console would
feature a 600 megahertz processor and 128 megabytes of random-access
memory -- features normally found on better-than-average home
computers.

A company source said Microsoft discussed the Xbox with a number of
independent game programmers and developers and found interest to be
high. Many developers have already written games to be run on the
Windows operating system, a stripped-down version of which will power
the Xbox.

Thus, few changes will be needed to move existing PC games to the Xbox.
Microsoft officials think that will give them an advantage by having
established games as soon as the system is introduced to the public. It
also will save developers time and money.

The introduction of a new gaming platform can be a risky business. Sega
Enterprises Ltd. of Japan bombed when it introduced the Sega Saturn
back in 1996 and was quickly overtaken by the original Sony PlayStation
a year later. Only last fall, when Sega introduced its new Dreamcast
machine, did the company make a comeback in the gaming market.

The Sega Dreamcast, which uses software developed jointly with
Microsoft, currently retails for $199.99, with games costing anywhere
from $29.99 to $49.99 each.

Sony's new PlayStation2, introduced Saturday in Japan, is selling for
about $370 and has sold nearly 1 million copies so far, Sony says.
Prices for the U.S. version, expected to be introduced in September,
have not been set.

The PlayStation2 is the most advanced platform currently on the market.
It has the ability to play audio CDs and DVDs and link to the Internet
for multiplayer games and basic World Wide Web access.

Nintendo's latest offering, the Nintendo 64, currently sells for less
than $100, though the company is planning to release a high-tech
successor in time for Christmas.

------

On the Net: Microsoft site: microsoft.com

Copyright 2000 Associated Press, All rights reserved.

-0-

By MICHAEL J. MARTINEZ



APO Priority=r
APO Category=1700

*** end of story ***



To: SunSpot who wrote (39114)3/7/2000 8:59:00 AM
From: John F. Dowd  Respond to of 74651
 
SunSpot:Regarding the full duplex problem: You will not experience the problem on a lightly loaded server. But try to copy just one huge file with xcopy with nobody else connecting to the server, and the problem appears. There are many servers out there running full duplex that could get faster if they were changed to half duplex. (We changed a few of our installations when we found out...)

Uh daaaaaaah!!!!!

JFD