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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Scumbria who wrote (109369)5/4/2000 5:23:00 PM
From: pgerassi  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578938
 
Dear Scumbria and John:

FYI: THe US Military is still "diddling" the signal. My portable GPS shows traces of this every night when its left on and in one place. The same kind of plotted diddle path is still there (90% of the time within 100M Horizontally and 150M Vertically (for each axis)). The Military still has not turned it off. Satellite switch off would create jumps between current groups instead of slowly changing plot of stationary object.

I wonder when they will be forced to turn of "diddling". If the Executive Order is now effective, how long do they have before they MUST comply? As of this morning, they have not.

Pete



To: Scumbria who wrote (109369)5/4/2000 5:35:00 PM
From: Jim McMannis  Respond to of 1578938
 
From the YUK...
AMD flash sold out well into 2001...
Man o man...sandisk anyone?

----
Posted 04/05/2000 1:21pm by Mike Magee

AMD sold out of Flash well into 2001

Chip company AMD confirmed today that it has sold out of its entire Flash capacity not just for the year 2000, but for next year too.

AMD has a joint venture with Fujitsu, dubbed FASL, which has five fabs around the world producing product.

Peter Heinrich, director of marketing of AMD's memory group in Europe, said, however, that it was unlikely consumers will be affected by the shortages, caused by a vast increase in demand for mobile phones.

Heinrich said: "It is very clear that the market has changed and demand for Flash now outstrips supply. Every wafer this year is sold out to dedicated customers and that's also true for 2001."

He said that most of AMD's Flash capacity went to tier one customers, with which it has long term agreements. Those customers have already secured their allocations for next year, but Heinrich said AMD has also acted to ensure that the firm's distributors are unaffected by the shortage.

He said: "We can count on the revenues from Flash for both this year and next." Mobile phones account for the lion's share of demand for Flash, he said.

"Mobile phones is one of the bigger market segments but we serve various other segments too," he said. There will be 435 million phones built worldwide this year, AMD estimates.

He said that it wasn't just Flash which was affected. "There's a shortage of capacitors, displays and filters because of the enormous growth too," he said. AMD's CEO Jerry Sanders said at a shareholder's meeting last week that his firm and Fujitsu were investing heavily to meet future Flash demand.

Heinrich's observations were confirmed by Richard Gordon, senior memory analyst at Dataquest Europe. He said that Flash revenues were expected to rise by 100 per cent this year. "Nokia and Ericcson are putting in place deals that guarantee supplies," he said. "Portable applications are fuelling the market," he added. ©



To: Scumbria who wrote (109369)5/4/2000 5:50:00 PM
From: Petz  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578938
 
Scumbria, re:<The amazing thing is that they still are selling with almost no premium.>

Yea, almost like AMD before it was "discovered."

Someone told me most stocks were down today. Is that true?

Petz