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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Incorporated (QCOM) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: marginmike who wrote (110009)12/29/2001 11:23:21 AM
From: Uncle Frank  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
>> a good story for me

Sure has been, but not everyone has your trading instincts. For those of us playing the ltb&h game, the last two years have been somewhat less than stellar.

uf@painfullypatient.com



To: marginmike who wrote (110009)12/29/2001 1:26:54 PM
From: limtex  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
mm - but for many others all that loyalty to the Q has yielded is worse portfolio damage than with many other stocks over the last two years. At least with the other stocks one knew they were very risky but with the Q one sort one rested on the fact that the cdma patents were a toll gate on the future of the 3G industry.

That vision is beginning to look more and more like a mirage as the delays have evaporated interest in 3G and the economics do not seem to point to massive and growing profitability for SPs indeed the very opposite as the SPs cut eachothers throat in a fight to the death over non-plussed customers.

Q has been a stealth portfolio killer. Slowly and almost invisibly it has crunched away at values and has had the most peculiar earnings record. No-one today seems to have very much idea about when if ever we might see $ growth in the numbers.

Great announcememnt after great announcement seems to have had no effect on the inexorable and relentless reduction in the share price. Each day we hope that the volatility has ended but it doesn't.

Patience is not only thin it is near invisible.

Best,

L



To: marginmike who wrote (110009)12/31/2001 12:35:33 AM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 152472
 
Off topic -- New WTC Observation Platform Opens.

December 30, 2001

New WTC Observation Platform Opens

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 3:14 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (AP) -- After three months of peering through gaps in fences and
past police barricades, visitors on Sunday got an unobstructed view of the
remains of the World Trade Center from a newly built observation platform.

Starting at dawn, hundreds of people stood in a line that snaked for blocks,
waiting in freezing temperatures for the 13-foot-high stage to open at 9 a.m.

For some, the view of ground zero was a religious epiphany.

``This is disturbing -- but also wonderful. We are Christians, and this teaches us
to help and love one another,'' said Shannon Pope of St. Louis, Mo., tears
streaming down her cheeks as she clutched her 4-year-old son Collin in her
arms.

She had won the visit for herself and 19 relatives in a nationwide family reunion
essay contest. The group included her 90-year-old grandmother, Janice Floyd.

``It's unbelievable! It's still smoking!'' Floyd said when she saw the devastation.

The platform, accessed by a long wooden ramp, can hold between 300 to 400
people. It is big enough across the front for about a dozen people at a time to
stand side-by-side to see the huge red cranes and other machinery that have been
at work day and night since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

The cranes still stop, almost daily, so workers can remove the remains of the
dead.

Instead of craning for a view down blocked-off streets, visitors now can get an
unobstructed view of the jagged holes in the ground that open into what was
once the trade center's underground mall.

``What struck me was the open wide space, no buildings. But it also looks like a
construction site,'' said Scott Smith, who drove to New York from West
Hartford, Conn., with his 7-year-old daughter, Lane.

The rectangular, fenced-in structure is located on Church Street alongside the
cemetery behind historic St. Paul's Church, and within view of City Hall.

The platform was officially opened Saturday by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, who
urged people to ``come here and say a little prayer and reflect on the whole
history of America.''

Giuliani also added an inscription to one of the wooden railings: ``We will always
remember what you did here -- you, our heroes -- to save America. God bless
you.''

The city plans three more observation platforms in the area, but there was no
immediate word on when they would be finished.

History was on the mind of Greg Packer, a New Yorker visiting ground zero for
the fourth time.

``Each time, it just gets harder and harder,'' he said. ``But there's nothing more
important than to see this. This is more important to me than any concert or
game that I've ever seen, because this is history.''

A visitor from France, Frederic Hustache of Paris, got up at 6 a.m. to join the
line -- but the cold drove him into a coffee shop across the street.

``The point is not to actually see everything. It's to feel what is here,'' he said.

Hustache came with a friend, Armand Benezra, who had last visited when the
twin towers were intact.

``I still remember New York that way,'' Benezra said. ``This has become a sort of
big cemetery. And we are here because of all the people who died. We're here to
pay tribute to them.''

Copyright 2001 The Associated Press