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To: Frank who wrote (131776)4/6/2001 10:03:51 AM
From: willcousa  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Frank - Well put! We've barely seen the beginning. And biotech will be as important as electronics.



To: Frank who wrote (131776)4/6/2001 12:40:28 PM
From: Jim McMannis  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
Frank,
RE:"Anyone who thinks that "technology" is history will live to regret that investment decision. The rise of technology is just beginning. The teams are taking batting practice as the fans file into the bleachers--the first inning hasn't even started. I am a Professor at one of the largest universities on the planet. I have lived my adult life around labs, computers and research facilities here and at other major institutions. And I can tell you that people outside the technology research enterprise have no idea what is coming down the pipe. For some little punky broker who avoided calculus in college to declare technology is finished (as several have done recently on CNBC) shows a sad lack of education--historical and current. Technology is on the rise and sooner or later the equities will follow. This Century will see greater technological advances than any of us can even imagine--the tide is just beginning to wax--Frank"

That's one to print out and pin on my wall.

BTW, way back when, when I took calculus, they made the business majors cross campus and takes it with us science majors. The grade distribution was astounding. I remember one guy from business getting a C. The rest were D's and F's. Average difference in scores was probably 30 points+. The science majors were A's and B's.

Shortly after they made up their own course.

Jim



To: Frank who wrote (131776)4/6/2001 2:04:57 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
EMLX and VRTS potential.......Two words: market potential. While most research firms vary in their projections, nearly all agree that, like many other technologies knighted for fast-track acceleration, the market will bloom. Dataquest thinks the SAN marketplace will grow 89 percent compounded annually between 1999 and 2003; IDC says SANs are expected to grow ten-fold by 2002. And those may be conservative numbers.

Obviously, the storage industry is hardly mature. The world may know by the end of the conference next Wednesday whether it has gotten any older, pending certain vendor announcements.