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To: Salah Mohamed who wrote (81976)5/4/2000 9:59:00 PM
From: The Duke of URLĀ©  Respond to of 97611
 
Sorry, don't know what 'QED' stands for.

dictionary.com
_______________^
Salah, clic on this /|\.

Q.E.D.
abbr. Latin

Quod erat demonstrandum (which was to be demonstrated.)

I think (?), if you substitute the words, "it must follow" for qed it will work.



To: Salah Mohamed who wrote (81976)5/5/2000 5:13:00 AM
From: Seamus McKenna  Respond to of 97611
 
<< Sorry, don't know what 'QED' stands for. >>

Quad Erat Demonstrandum (latin) = "Which it was required to prove". Used to be used in my maths text books (about thirty years ago) at the end of the proof for geometry theorems.



To: Salah Mohamed who wrote (81976)5/5/2000 3:15:00 PM
From: rudedog  Respond to of 97611
 
Salah - you are correct - CPQ is the market leader in Novell sales, and nearly 1/3 of the "volume servers" go into the NOVL market. It is also the leader in NT servers and in SCO servers, all big business for CPQ.

According to a recent article, CPQ has nearly 50% of the 4-way server market and 80% of the 8-way market, in part riding their early advocacy of fully integrated and tested OS platforms. Also because the products are better. DELL's big gains in server units are mostly 1P and 2P small servers.