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Technology Stocks : Dell Technologies Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sig who wrote (167568)10/22/2001 9:43:20 AM
From: kemble s. matter  Respond to of 176387
 
Sig,
Hi!!

RE: marketwatch.com.

"We believe this agreement effectively doubles Dell's market opportunity in the data storage business," said Kevin Rollins, Dell's president and chief operating officer, in a statement.

Opens a few more doors huh? :o)

Best, Kemble



To: Sig who wrote (167568)10/23/2001 11:43:52 AM
From: kemble s. matter  Respond to of 176387
 
Sig,
Hi!!

RE: NEW YORK, Oct. 21 /PRNewswire/ -- In the days before the first ground assault in Afghanistan by U.S. military troops, Newsweek has learned, top intelligence officials in the administration concluded that they had pinned down Osama bin Laden's location to what one called a ``20-by-20 mile area'' in Afghanistan. But the area was so full of caves and tunnels that it was, in the words of one source, ``impossible to seal.'' Newsweek reports in the October 29 issue (on newsstands Monday, October 22), the aim of the raids, according to this source, was to find better intelligence so that bin Laden and others could be attacked from the air with greater precision. ``The preferred method still is dropping a bomb.''

(Photo: newscom.com )
According to U.S. officials, during the weekend raid, ground troops gathered intelligence from a complex that Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar has used as a base. Newsweek has learned that U.S. commanders deliberately avoided targeting the compound as part of its bombing campaign, so that it would remain intact as the focal point for the first ground attack.

I'm sure you saw this comment from the recent link from Scott...Couldn't help but not think of your scenario and technology advice on what the Special Forces may use to locate Bin Laden...Seems as if the heat locating technology can be used very soon...

Best, Kemble