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Technology Stocks : Son of SAN - Storage Networking Technologies -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Joe Wagner who wrote (3059)4/10/2001 6:13:38 PM
From: J Fieb  Respond to of 4808
 
Joe W., You have always looked at the bigger picture and I didn't think it would matter in the world of storage networking. If any good people lost their jobs recently it wasn't for long....

Firms sweep up laid-off workers
Managers re-employed 37% faster than a year ago
By Cecily Fraser, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 5:02 PM ET Apr 10, 2001





SAN FRANCISCO (CBS.MW) - Management employees who lost jobs in the first quarter found new ones 37 percent faster than a year earlier, snatched up by companies desperate for talent even in a weakening U.S. economy, according to a new study.

Companies "are taking the chance now to get those people back on."

John Challenger,Challenger, Gray & Christmas


Fired executives and managers took 2.27 months to find new positions in the first quarter, down from 3.58 months a year ago, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc. That was the shortest median job-search time recorded in the 15 years that Challenger has tracked the data.

With unemployment rates at record lows through the fourth quarter, many employers chose not to hire in the second half of 2000 because they couldn't find the right people to upgrade their workforce.

Companies "are taking the chance now to get those people back on," said John Challenger, chief executive of the outplacement firm.

Companies that delay hiring risk falling behind the competition, Challenger said. In the time it takes to bring new executives or managers up to speed, business plans and customer service may suffer, which can lead to competitors taking away valuable market share, he said.

The study also linked the decline in job-search time to a surplus of dot.com workers now in the labor market. Old and New Economy companies alike tend to favor dot.com workers for their high-tech skills and entrepreneurial abilities, experts said.

"The high-tech industry is still doing good," said Rudy Dew, head of a career-counseling firm in Torrance, Calif. "The days of large signing bonuses, company car and many of the big perks are gone, but the salaries are not reduced at all."

It's now taking Dew's clients about 2.5 months to find a new position, he said. On average, Challenger expects laid-off workers to find a new position in 3.2 months or less.

"In the past, not only did you have the unemployed looking for jobs, but you had a lot of people that were working and job hopping," Dew said. With the labor shakeout, "there are fewer people competing for the jobs now."

Demographics

Many companies favor more experienced employees who can hit the ground running when starting a new position. Discharged workers over 50 took about 2.26 months to find new positions in the first quarter, a faster rate than younger workers, and down 41 percent from 3.85 months last year.

"This seems to be a period of time where experience is in great demand," Challenger said.

Older workers proved valuable to small businesses, which are the largest employers in the country and were responsible for 75 percent of the net new jobs created during the 1990s, Challenger said.

A volatile labor marketThe results were surprising considering the layoffs that occurred in the first quarter, Challenger said. Job cuts, which began escalating in December, reached an estimated 540,519 for the three months, the highest since Challenger began tracking the number in 1993.

"The economy was running short on labor and companies were seeing orders they couldn't fill last summer into the fall," Challenger said. The results of the study " suggest that employers are gearing up for the next surge of growth in the fall."

Sectors in "growth mode" include energy, oil and gas, electrical power, aerospace defense, healthcare, mortgage banking and education and training, he said.

"Employment measures are lagging indicators, so it may be that things take hold before we see them in the employment numbers."

Henry Farber,Princeton University


While the study is encouraging, labor economists caution that it may be too early to tell if the job market will be stronger by fall. About 86,000 jobs were lost in March, representing the biggest monthly loss since November 1991, the Labor Department said last week. The U.S. jobless rate is now 4.3 percent. See full story.

"Employment measures are lagging indicators, so it may be that things take hold before we see them in the employment numbers," said Henry Farber, an economics professor at Princeton University.

If the economy continues to head south, that's likely to sap employer confidence and make some firms reluctant to hire, while workers will be less likely to quit and look for new jobs, Farber said.

"I would expect to see relatively slow employment growth over the next year," he said.

The Challenger Index is based on a quarterly survey of 3,000 discharged managers and executives from a wide range of industries nationwide.

Cecily Fraser is Assistant Personal Finance Editor for CBS.MarketWatch.com in San Francisco.

PS I liked that IDC snippet so much am going to post it again...

Session 4.3 Fibre Channel’s Momentum
Eric Sheppard, Research Analyst, Storage Systems, IDC
With momentum on its side, Fibre Channel components are expected to account for the vast majority of Storage Area Network (SAN) interconnects through 2004. Mr. Sheppard will size the Fibre Channel components market, rank the vendors playing in this space and forecast the market through 2004Coverage will include Hubs, Directors, Loop and Fabric Switches and HBAs. Metrics will include both revenue and ports.

Anyone going to be at the IDC conference? Anyone who can get this new data ASAP? Thanks in advance.



To: Joe Wagner who wrote (3059)4/10/2001 6:23:29 PM
From: J Fieb  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4808
 
To all, If you come across any import earnings dates for our sector please post...EMC coming up on

EMC to release Earnings Thursday April 19 before the opening.



To: Joe Wagner who wrote (3059)4/10/2001 6:56:27 PM
From: J Fieb  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4808
 
Joe W., THey keep building these data centers, how they gonna hook them together?

Metromedia Fiber Network Leases Fiber-optic Infrastructure
By James Alan Miller

Metromedia Fiber Network (MFN) today announced it would be leasing its fiber-optic infrastructure to IT consulting and outsourcing firm Computer Sciences Corporation (CSC). CSC plans on using the fiber-optic infrastructure to provide clients with secure, high-speed connectivity to its data centers.

According to CSC, by securing the fiber-optic infrastructure from MFN, it can now deliver services over a private metro-area network, as well as offer new and enhanced services such as real-time data recovery and back-up, on-line storage and other bandwidth-intensive applications.

"CSC needs high-speed, robust and scalable bandwidth for interconnection of its data and hosting centers, campuses and key customer locations," said Harold Hickman, vice president, Network Engineering Services in CSC's Global Infrastructure Services group. "The MFN solution for metro-area fiber connectivity fits well into our global IP network architecture and strengthens our ability to deliver extremely reliable and secure communication facilities to our clients."

Remember that CSC is bidding on the NSA outsourcing plan..
here the excerpt from the archives...

An NSA spokesperson said an internal agency effort known as Project Trailblazer has been designed to look at ways to improve the agency's technology acquisition process. The NSA is also preparing to release a proposal for a $5 billion outsourcing contract, known as Project Groundbreaker, that will transfer operation of all of its administrative networks to one of three bidders (see story).

Olga Grkavac, executive vice president of the Enterprise Solutions Division at the Information Technology Association of America, called Groundbreaker "a very innovative contract" and said the three potential prime contractors -- AT&T Corp., Computer Sciences Corp. in El Segundo, Calif., and Greenbelt, M.D.-based OAO Corp. -- "have the expertise that NSA needs."


These data centers will make MNFX and GX into what they dreamed of all along.:-)



To: Joe Wagner who wrote (3059)4/13/2001 8:54:37 AM
From: J Fieb  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 4808
 
Joe W., Really like this one. A couple days ago there was that INRG piece about that UK genome director. We haven't talked about storage needs in this arena.....

April 10, 2001

The 800-Pound Genome
Decoding the human genome wasn't the culmination of biocomputing - it was just the end of the beginning. The sheer horsepower and storage demanded by the analytic and database challenges of bioscience applications can swallow information systems whole and beg for more.






IT vendors that are reducing expectations in other areas might want to consider the burgeoning life sciences market, an initial forecast for which is presented in Figure 1, drawn from IDC Executive Insight The Convergence of Biology and IT: Market Impacts of the Bioscience Era (IDC #24168, March 2001).

Figure 1 - Biosciences IT Market Revenue, 2000-2004


Consider Celera Genomics, the private company whose methods claimed first prize in sequencing the human genome. Celera's infrastructure uses:

$1 million of electric power annually
70TB for databases, growing by 15-20GB per day
1.7TeraFLOPS of aggregate processing power
900 Compaq AlphaServer processors
Six Paracel GeneMatchers (each with thousands of processors)
Paracel is a massively parallel processor (MPP) manufacturer that Celera purchased last year.


Big Science Just Got Bigger
Biocomputational requirements now exceed those of other "big science" applications, such as weather forecasting, subatomic physics, and nuclear weapons research. In addition to genomics, disciplines such as bioinformatics, pharmacogenomics, proteomics, and computational chemistry are hungering for more powerful systems.

J. Craig Venter, Celera's president, has noted that "just three years ago, the computational needs of biology were thought to be minor and irrelevant to the computing industry. Today, biologists are setting the pace of development for the industry."

Venter's remarks were made during the announcement of a cooperative R&D agreement between Celera and Sandia National Laboratory that will develop a supercomputing platform for mining and modeling genetic data. The $25 million project will be powered by a dense fabric of Compaq AlphaServers and is expected to provide 100 trillion operations per second (TeraOPS) of raw compute power, making it the world's largest supercomputer.

Centers of Gravity
The biocomputing universe is still expanding and has yet to condense into recognizable vendor constellations.

Compaq Versastor anyone?has drawn a bead on the technical computing market and achieved high penetration of the expanding life sciences segment. Its focused investments in solutions development (e.g., staff hiring and training, third-party software partnerships, and requirements analysis) seem to be paying off.

IBM's large orbit around scientific, academic, and government technical computing isn't decaying, however. According to www.top500.org, IBM will soon have built six of the top 10 supercomputers and 215 of the top 500.

NuTec Sciences (a bioinformatics solutions provider) has tapped IBM to build a 7.5TeraFLOPS supercomputer, in partnership with U.S. National Human Genome Research Institute. The cluster will connect 1,250 IBM e-Server p640s running IBM's DB2 Universal Database, supported by a NuTec operating system, 2.5TB of memory, and 50TB of online storage. NuTec will use it to manage, mine, and integrate genetic data and share this information with the life sciences community.

Other technical computing vendors, such as Hewlett-Packard, NEC, SGI, and Sun, haven't scored biocomputing wins as effectively as Compaq and IBM but are expected to aggressively seek larger shares. Many outcomes are possible, as the field is far from mature and its ecosystems are still forming.

Life Lessons for Biocomputing Vendors
The emerging biocomputing market needs:

Hardware. High-end servers, MPPs and other supercomputers, networking gear, workstations, and instrumentation
Storage. On the order of petabytes, overall
Services. Hosting and application provision services for decoding genomes and analyzing their functions
Software. Knowledge management, database systems, and applications for informatics, sequencing, proteomics, computational chemistry, visualization, and more
Services and storage will become increasingly important over time, as Figure 2 displays.

With its IT infrastructures and business models still immature, limited supplies of relevant IT expertise, and overwhelming knowledge management requirements, biocomputing's solution space is underpopulated. Current software suppliers (mostly from an academic-based cottage industry) and service providers can't keep up with biocomputing's pace of change and scale of problems.

Even though biotech is not feeling as much economic pain as high tech recently has, its continued growth still faces obstacles. Investment sources, smarting from other losses, are especially finicky and may desire returns more quickly than can reasonably be expected. Also, a plethora of knotty policy and ethical issues that can't be wished away portend uneven progress for the industry as a whole.

Still, in the current economic climate, it is hard to find a more robust IT market than biocomputing.

Figure 2 - Biosciences IT Market Segmentation, 2000 and 2004




--Geoffrey Dutton

Related Research

Take a look at the graphs here...

idc.com

Sure enough while the whole pie gets bigger storage overhauls servers sometime over the next 3 years. Compaq won't have any trouble selling virtualization to theis market.

Open Q) Over on Yahoo there has been talk about BRCD and CPQ. With the pr piece last wk I didn't see any hint that
there was big trouble between the two. That would suggest CPQ would dump them. But the future doesn't wait for anyone, we are shifting to the time of directors and that is an opportunity for those that have products in that categry already. I think INRG earnings are also the 19th and while all others reporting that day have issued est. INRG hasn't said anything. INRG will be the bellweather for director sales.