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To: puborectalis who wrote (99090)5/23/2000 8:20:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 120523
 
Excellent interview with Larry
Augustin(LNUX)....http://www.radiowallstreet.com/NASApp/RWS/EventPage?ID=21487...
Points of interest...1)31% of servers on Internet run Linux...2)Professional Services,via
SourceForge,has grown to 4% revenues,over 4500 projects, since inception in
january....3)competes very successfully against SUNW targeting low-end servers....4)Primary
target companies are Akamai(largest customer in
3Q),Doubleclick,Deja.com,USInternetworking,and NetLedger..as #of clicks
increases,LNUX provides systems to handle increased traffic....5)Server market of Internet is
a "significant" market wit no real threat from the white-box companies...6)gross margins
increasing with more leverage.

VA Linux Has 3rd-Qtr Loss; Sales Jump on Server Sales (Update1)
5/23/00 3:51:00 PM
Source: Bloomberg News

Sunnyvale, California, May 23 (Bloomberg) -- VA Linux Systems Inc., a maker of software
and
computers that run the Linux operating system, had a wider fiscal third-quarter loss. Revenue
shot up
more than eightfold, boosted by sales of servers.

The loss was $20.6 million, or 58 cents, in the quarter ended April 28. That compares with a
loss of
$3.4 million, or 58 cents, in the year-earlier period.

Excluding acquisition expenses, VA Linux said it would have lost $4.5
million, or 13 cents, compared with $2.9 million, or 17 cents. On that
basis, analysts expected a loss of 23 cents, the average estimate
from First Call/Thomson Financial.

Revenue surged to $34.6 million from $4.3 million as the company
benefited from Internet startups using Linux to run their Web sites. VA
Linux attracted customers by selling computers designed to run Linux
faster than rivals' machines, analysts said.

''VA Linux puts together the whole package,'' said Walter Winnitzki,
an analyst at Chase H&Q, who rates VA Linux a ''buy.''

The company said it plans to keep tapping into the Internet market,
undeterred by recent drops in Web companies' stock prices.

''We don't have to bet which ones will succeed,'' said VA Linux Chief
Executive Larry Augustin. ''We sell to all of them.''

VA Linux shares, which fell 5 3/4 to 38 1/2 in Nasdaq trading before
the report, rose to 41 1/2 after the release.

The shares have lost 83 percent of their value since their first day of trading. VA Linux's
eightfold rise
to a close of 239 1/4 on Dec. 9 made the Sunnyvale, California, company the best-
performing IPO in
10 years.

The company had expenses of $4 million for in-process research and development, $1.9
million for
amortization related to acquisitions of TruSolutions Inc. and NetAttach Inc., and $10.2 million
for
employee stock compensation. It had six times more shares outstanding in the recent period.
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To: puborectalis who wrote (99090)5/23/2000 8:38:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 120523
 
VA Linux reports strong revenue,
beats estimates
By Stephen Shankland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
May 23, 2000, 4:10 p.m. PT

update Computer maker VA Linux Systems today reported quarterly
revenues of $34.6 million and a net loss 10 cents better than
expected.

Analysts surveyed by First Call/Thompson Financial expected a loss of 23 cents per
share for
the fiscal third quarter, which ended April 28. Excluding non-cash items, VA reported
a net loss
of 13 cents per share, the company said. Excluding non-cash charges, net losses
declined
from $6.3 million the previous quarter to $4.5 million in the third quarter, the company
said.

Revenue this quarter grew 71 percent from the previous quarter's
$20.2 million and 710 percent from the same quarter a year ago.

"It was a fantastic third quarter by almost any measure," VA chief
executive Larry Augustin boasted in a conference call. Deutsche
Banc Alex. Brown analyst Phil Reuppel agreed, calling it a
"breakthrough quarter."

VA Linux makes Intel-based computers with the Linux operating
system, a clone of Unix and competitor to Windows created by a
host of programmers. The company's revenues come chiefly from
hardware sales, but the company wants to increase the amount it
earns from services such as customization and consulting.

One key facet watched by W.R. Hambrecht analyst Keith
Bachman is the success of services. "VA, we think, needs to
broaden its revenue opportunity into professional services.
Professional services offer the opportunity to earn higher margins,"
he said in an interview today.

Services revenue was $1.5 million, or 4.2 percent of total revenues,
VA said. That made the services business unit profitable, said VA
chief financial officer Todd Schull. Although the company expects
the services unit to remain profitable, aggressive hiring in the next two quarters will
mean the
margin won't be as plump, Schull said.

Services revenue came chiefly from projects translating software that works on
Windows NT so
it works on Linux and from hosting open-source programming efforts on the
company's
developer site, SourceForge, Augustin said.

Linux is still respected, though it's no longer enjoying the Wall Street euphoria that sent
its
stock skyrocketing after its IPO last year. The most recent Linux company to go
public,
software seller Caldera Systems, has been living in a less jubilant market. Its stock
price of
$10.38 is below the company's initial public offering price of $14.

Caldera Systems reported revenues of $1.4 million and a net loss of $9.2 million, or 32
cents
per share. Analyst expectations for Caldera earnings weren't available.

VA currently is in the process of digesting several companies it has acquired.

VA concluded two acquisitions in the last quarter. The first, TruSolutions, will result in
new
server models. The second, NetAttach, will bolster VA's coming push to sell storage
products
as well as servers, Augustin said.

"It is our intention to provide (customers) with a broad-based range of storage
products,"
Augustin said. One such product would be "network-attached storage," or NAS,
essentially
hard disks that can plug straight into a network to expand storage capacity.

Bachman wasn't overly enamored with the TruSolutions acquisition. "It's buying more
of the
same. I'd like to see VA diversify its revenue stream," he said.

Meanwhile, VA's acquisition of Andover.Net is expected to close next quarter, the
company
said. Andover.Net is a collection of Web sites such as Slashdot and Freshmeat for
programmers and other technically savvy readers. A total of 70 million pages of VA
and
Andover.Net Web sites are viewed each month, VA said.

About 77 percent of VA's business comes from selling Internet infrastructure--the
servers that
deliver Web pages and handle other parts of the Internet's inner workings. Augustin
said such
customers have an ongoing demand for new servers as their businesses grow. "As they
get
more clicks, they need more infrastructure," he said. "They just keep coming back."

VA's biggest customer is Akamai, a company that speeds Internet Web page delivery,
whose
purchases provided VA with about 20 percent of its revenue. Other large customers in
the last
quarter included Deja.com, USinternetworking and Doubleclick, Augustin said.

VA said it now has a sales force of 60 and has begun to hire its first European
employees.
Sales subsidiaries have been established in France, Switzerland and the Netherlands,
with new
offices to come in the United Kingdom and Germany, Schull said.

Walter Winnitzki of Chase Hambrecht & Quist was concerned that VA's sales would
be
affected by the stock market woes, which could curtail purchasing plans of Internet
companies.

Such concerns are "exaggerated," Augustin said. "We're still seeing significant rollouts."