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Strategies & Market Trends : MDA - Market Direction Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (55065)6/22/2000 11:11:00 PM
From: Box-By-The-Riviera™  Respond to of 99985
 
ah...but that was yesterday.

What can you do for me today.

The problem with all didactic analysis is:::::

It's only as good as yesterday's noose (news)...

However... a looser policy on your part might lead to an insight in answering the age old question::::

just what were those two intent upon doing in Keat's reference to a grecian urn in his ode....

hi Edwarda.... if you are still with us in spirit...I hope you approve of the frame in which I posed this question....

More babel for a tower market in leaning mode....

Folks... too many games, not enough reason. Nobody needs a chart to figure that out.... although it can help.

regards
J



To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (55065)6/22/2000 11:49:00 PM
From: russet  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 99985
 
Could be another effect happening to increase power and hence hydrocarbon consumption,...

http://www.msnbc.com/news/423672.asp?0nm=T11O&cp1=1

Silicon Valley is draining power grid

High-tech ?New Economy? uses much more energy than old

ASSOCIATED PRESS ,...

,...PCS USE 13 PERCENT OF POWER
But the advent of personal computers and the Internet is making it more difficult for power suppliers throughout the United States to keep up with the digital age?s increased demands.
Computers consume about 13 percent of the nation?s power, according to EPRI Corp., a Palo Alto research and development group that studies the utility industry.
The Internet?s borderless community also is taxing U.S. power suppliers because about 80 percent of online traffic comes through this country.

To handle all the Internet action, businesses are turning entire offices into warehouses for the powerful computer servers and peripheral equipment needed to navigate networks. These so-called ?server farms? consume 10 to 12 times more power than the traditional office building filled with human workers.