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Technology Stocks : Network Appliance -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DownSouth who wrote (3588)7/5/2000 1:09:22 PM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10934
 
Tom Taulli has some nice things to say about NTAP:

internetstockreport.com

Network Appliance: A
Disruption?
by Tom Taulli

July 5, 2000 - For many years, EMC
(NYSE:EMC) has been benefiting from
the huge demand for sophisticated data
storage. EMC considers itself a
developer of electronic information
infrastructures ("E-infostructures" for
short). It seems to be working. The
company has a market capitalization of
$167 billion.

But lucrative markets always have pesky competitors. EMC's
marketplace is no exception. A tough player is Network Appliance
(NASDAQ:NTAP). In the world of EMC, Network Appliance is small -
only a $25 billion market capitalization.

Network Appliance calls its technology Network Attached Storage
(NAS), a technology it masterminded in 1992. The are a myriad of
benefits to NAS. Basically, it is implemented within a local area network
- seamlessly integrating with existing IT infrastructures. The technology
helps to reduce costs, as well a complexity, but performance does not
suffer. Net Appliance can also scale to multiple terabytes. Installation is
easy, taking about 30 minutes. Administration is painless.

Take John Deere as an example. Of course, the company is a heavy user
of mechanical design software, which involves massive data storage. But
after installing Network Appliance technology, John Deere saw vast
improvements. User productivity increased, downtime fell, and data file
storage and access was much easier.

With such results, it is not surprising that Network Appliance is
undergoing hyperspeed growth. In the past quarter, the company had
$200 million in revenues, a 120% increase compared to the same period
a year ago. There were profits, to boot: $24.5 million. During this time,
Network Appliance completed one of the largest NAS systems for
Yahoo! (yes, definitely a site that requires impressive technologies for
data storage).

Interestingly enough, Network Appliance's solutions have been
considered a "disruptive technology." The phrase is from the influential
book called The Innovator's Dilemma, written by Harvard Professor
Clayton Christensen. A disruptive technology can wreak havoc on
existing leaders (such as EMC) and result in new dominant companies
(such as Network Appliance). Of course, this is theory. But the reality is
clear: Network Appliance has technology that many companies need
now - and likely for many years to come.