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Strategies & Market Trends : Angels of Alchemy -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bald Man from Mars who wrote (19963)11/11/2000 2:04:50 AM
From: ColtonGang  Respond to of 24256
 
Hardware retaking center stage
With the culling of many dot-com companies, hardware heavies like
Intel and Hewlett-Packard, as well as the upstart Transmeta, are back
in the limelight.

By Ken Popovich, eWEEK
November 10, 2000

Hardware products will retake center stage from the dot-com
companies at Comdex in Las Vegas, as computer makers unveil new
desktops, notebooks, Internet appliances and peripherals and Intel
Corp. touts its next-generation Pentium 4 and Itanium chips.

The resurgence of hardware comes a year after more than 600 dot-coms
crowded the showroom floor. There will be dramatically fewer dot-coms this
year, said a Comdex spokesman, reflecting the failure of hundreds of such
companies to survive the past year. For example, online auction house
2TheMarket.com, which had a large presence last year, is no longer in
business.

One of hardware's heavyweights, Intel
(Nasdaq: INTC), will demonstrate desktops
running the company's 1.4GHz and 1.5GHz
Pentium 4 processors, which are due to
launch Nov. 20. In addition, the chip-making
giant will promote its upcoming 64-bit Itanium processor, designed for use in
high-end workstations and servers.

Hewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE: HWP), meanwhile, will show off its compact
OmniBook 500. The new ultralight, which weighs a little more than 3
pounds, features a 12.1-inch display and is touted as being
wireless-capable and able to operate on batteries for up to 10 hours. A base
model equipped with a 500MHz Celeron will sell for about $1,900, while
notebooks featuring faster Pentium III processors will be priced at more than
$3,000.

Applause for appliances
Internet appliances will also garner a lot of attention this year as companies
such as America Online Inc. and Microsoft Corp. roll out new systems.

AOL (NYSE: AOL) and Gateway Inc. (NYSE: GTW) on Friday unveiled their
new wireless Web tablet, powered by Transmeta Corp.'s new mobile
processor. The product, which features a full-color touch-screen and is
designed to offer consumers simpler connectivity to AOL's online site, is
scheduled to go on sale in the first quarter of next year.

Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Chairman Bill Gates is also expected to unveil a
new Web tablet that the company is hoping to introduce next year. While
little is known about the product, it's expected to be marketed in conjunction
with Microsoft's online service.

Among other companies touting Web tablet browsers are Sonicblue Inc.,
which recently changed its name from S3 Inc. , and Honeywell International
Inc.

A host of display and peripheral manufacturers will be on hand with new
flat-panel LCDs, storage devices, and printing and scanning systems.

Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. (Nasdaq: SSNHY) will have one of the
biggest displays -- literally -- when the company introduces what it's touting
as the world's first 24-inch, HDTV-ready analog/digital LCD screen, the
SyncMaster 240T. The display, which offers 1,920-by-1,200-pixel resolution,
also features a Picture-By-Picture function, which allows for a split screen
that enables side-by-side displays from two input sources.

In keeping with PC makers' moves to more colorful and less boxy systems,
storage maker Iomega (NYSE: IOM) will unveil a stylish external
CD-Rewritable drive, the Predator. The 8-by-4-by-32-inch drive will go on sale
in January and will retail for $269.95.