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To: Paul Engel who wrote (104518)6/18/2000 2:51:00 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Intel Helps Teachers Buy Homes
By MAY WONG, AP Technology Writer

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) - Intel Corp. (NasdaqNM:INTC - news) and local school officials will introduce a mortgage-assistance program Monday to help teachers buy homes in the nation's most expensive housing market.

The pilot program in the Santa Clara Unified School District is the latest effort in the San Francisco and Silicon Valley region to try to attract and retain public school teachers, who are caught in a middle-income housing squeeze.

``We have an attractive package for recruiting new teachers, but once they have two or three years of experience and are ready to drop anchor in the community and buy a house, there is nothing they can afford,'' said district Superintendent Paul Perotti.

Santa Clara County's median home price was recently pegged at $550,000. A local teacher's average annual salary is $40,000.

Under the program, Santa Clara-based Intel, the world's largest microchip maker, has set up a $1.25 million housing fund for the school district.

The district will use the fund to pay $500 a month toward each eligible teacher's mortgage payment for up to five years and share in each home's appreciation or depreciation as an equity investor. At the end of five years, or sooner if the teacher leaves the district, the home owner repays the district, and the funds are reused.

Perotti said the district's contributions will mean a teacher with an annual household income of $74,000 could qualify for a $338,000 mortgage instead of a $267,000 mortgage.

The effort to financially assist teachers is among several under consideration in the region. In San Francisco, school officials and federal housing officials recently announced their hope to eventually offer 1,000 affordable housing units to the city's teachers, some as rentals and others as rent-to-own.



To: Paul Engel who wrote (104518)6/18/2000 3:17:00 PM
From: Robert Salasidis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
The whole problem is that if you are going to be running on web pads anyways, then the OS is secondary.

In that case, why not use a StrongARM SA1110 processor, which at the highest speed consumes only 400mW. Thereby making the low end Transmeta chips redundant.

If you need more power then the newly announced Intel chips should eliminate any perceived Transmeta advantage from the higher range as well.