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Technology Stocks : The New Qualcomm - a S&P500 company -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JohnG who wrote (13213)6/25/2000 9:58:00 AM
From: JohnG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13582
 
Lying Ed Snyder 10:30 AM, 6/23 On 24 interview. I added the link to the Snyder interview to my earlier post No. 13118.
JohnG
radiowallstreet.com

Snyder is up to his same old tricks.

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Message 25058 of 25076
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Wstera2--ON24 had Snyder on 10:30AM
johnqual
6/23/00 6:50 pm

today, 6/23 with his crap. Now ON24 is carying this sell recommendation FUD citing that a computer program
at
AboveTrade.com generated the sell recommendation as referenced below:

1)Lying Snyder appears on ON24 10:30 AM Friday 6/23. Sorry, no time to find the link, but I listened to it.LINK FOUND TO LYING ED SNYDER.
radiowallstreet.com

2)ON24 carries Sell recommendation:
biz.yahoo.com
Johnqual



To: JohnG who wrote (13213)6/26/2000 12:44:00 AM
From: Jon Koplik  Respond to of 13582
 
Text of (San Diego) Union-Tribune article (Nokia using Q ASIC chips)

uniontrib.com

(In case the link expires at some point).

*****************

Qualcomm chips set for Nokia

Phone maker will indirectly use parts

STAFF AND NEWS SERVICES

June 24, 2000

Nokia executives, who previously have said they would use only their own
chipsets in phones using Qualcomm's code-division multiple access technology,
apparently have agreed to indirectly use chips provided by the San Diego telecom.

Pete Peterson, telecommunications analyst with Prudential Securities, confirmed
that Nokia executives were at Qualcomm's San Diego headquarters. Yesterday,
Nokia announced it had a deal with Korean phone maker Telson Electronics Co. --
and Peterson said that deal will lead to the indirect supply of Qualcomm's chips
into Nokia-designed phones.

Nokia's usage of Qualcomm chipsets would be a huge win for Qualcomm due to
the sheer branding power of Nokia, the world's largest handset maker.

"There's no doubt there's high customer affinity for Nokia products," Peterson
said.

He noted that Nokia has tremendous power in pushing usage of CDMA
technology, but its own CDMA chipsets are seen as less efficient than
Qualcomm's.

Julie Cunnigham, vice president of investor relations for Qualcomm, confirmed
that Nokia and Telson will use Qualcomm chips. She said Nokia "has had some
real problems with their CDMA . . . of course; we think that's because they
weren't using our chips."

Staff writer Thom Kupper and Dow Jones News Service contributed to this report.

Copyright 2000 Union-Tribune Publishing Co.