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To: The Phoenix who wrote (41604)10/27/2000 8:39:00 PM
From: Eric  Respond to of 77400
 
Gary

Good find.

While I was over in Sweden in June visiting friends we discussed how the web is being adopted there.

A lot of companies and countries realize how important it is to remain competitive in the new world economy.

Not to mention how much money will be saved in the long run!

Eric



To: The Phoenix who wrote (41604)10/27/2000 8:55:15 PM
From: michael97123  Respond to of 77400
 
From the amat thread from mephisto. I thought it was a good counterpoint to Bambs.

To: Jacob Snyder who wrote (38863)
From: Mephisto
Friday, Oct 27, 2000 7:11 PM ET
Reply # of 38920

But I am a cynic and a sceptic, and most investors aren't. This gives me an advantage.

When I think about analysts, I agree 100% with what you say.

It's a pity analysts never seem to listen to CEOs.

"6:10AM Intel (INTC) 41 5/16: Company president and CEO, Craig Barrett, said he was bullish on the global chip
market, due to steady demand from makers of personal computers and mobile telephones saying "global mobile
phone penetration is expected to grow to one bln handsets by 2005 from about 400 mln this year". (from Yahoo
news on October 26, 2000)

Intel CEO says bullish on global chip mkt

By Nam In-soo

SEOUL, Oct 26 (Reuters) - Craig Barrett, president and CEO of the world's number one chipmaker, Intel Corp
(NasdaqNM:INTC - news), said on Thursday he was bullish on the global chip market, due to steady demand
from makers of personal computers and mobile telephones.

``I'm pretty bullish about the global demand for semiconductors considering steady growth in the PC, networking
infrastructure and wireless communications areas,'' he told a news conference.

Barrett was in Seoul for Intel Korea's e-Business Forum.

``According to forecasts, global mobile phone penetration is expected to grow to one billion handsets by 2005
from about 400 million this year,'' he said.

Intel said last week its third-quarter shipments of microprocessors, the brains of PCs which account for 80 percent
of the firm's sales and virtually all its profits -- were little changed from the second quarter, as were average selling
prices for each chip.

biz.yahoo.com

I'm fed up with analysts that won't listen to CEO's predictions for future growth. I forgot to mention that
I am NOT an Intel shareholder- Mephisto