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To: Sector Investor who wrote (25484)12/4/1997 9:16:00 AM
From: Captain James T. Kirk  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 61433
 
9.95 here, fast response trading, unbeatable thus far, an i get free real time as a back up to my other quote service.



To: Sector Investor who wrote (25484)12/4/1997 9:16:00 AM
From: Gary Korn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 61433
 
OT

MUNICH, Dec 3 (Reuters) - Intel Corp <INTC.O>. said on Wednesday it planned to unleash a broad array of Pentium II computer chips in 1998 in an effort to maintain its dominant position while expanding into new market segments. Intel planned to pair the heart of its high-performance Pentium II chip with a variety of other technologies to produce processors tailored for PCs ranging from low-cost home computers to mainframe-class machines, the company said at a news conference. The product strategy mirrors a reorganisation that created new divisions to focus on emerging segments in the computer industry, said Joachim Rissmann, Intel managing director for Central Europe. "We believe this segmentation will accelerate and we want to make sure that we continue to grow and that we don't give away any business," he told Reuters. In 1998, Intel planned to offer versions of Pentium II chips for inexpensive consumer and business desktop PCs, multimedia machines, portable PCs, engineering workstations and a range of servers for controlling networks, hosting Internet sites and running corporate date systems, he said. The strategy marks a critical shift for Intel, which in the past has introduced high-speed chips and then lowered prices to reach different market segments. Intel's share price has been pressured recently as financial analysts raised concerns that competitors Cyrix Corp <CYRX.O> and Advanced Micro Devices Inc <AMD.N>. were forcing the chip giant to lower prices and accept leaner margins. Cyrix has won sales by offering a specialised chip that Compaq Computer Corp <CPQ.N> uses in home PCs priced under $1,000, while AMD has been aggressive in tailoring its K6 chip for mobile computers. "The market is segmenting and we are going to address those segments," Rissmann said. For standard desktop computers, Intel would offer a 333MHz Pentium II chip in the first quarter of 1998, and follow up with others at 350, 400 and 450MHz, he said. It would also offer technology that increases the speeds at which PCs can move data from memory to the processor and accelerates processing of images or video. For home PCs, there would be Pentium II chips that run up to 300MHz and have slower system and graphics systems. Rissmann said these Pentium II chips would have the power to emulate a modem -- giving users the ability to connect the Internet while keeping the cost of the machine to around $1,000. Compaq's Cyrix-based home PCs do not have modems. In the server segment, Intel planned to release chips running up to 450MHz along with technology allowing eight Pentium II processors to work in tandem and an expanded cache, or memory built into the processor, a feature that boosts processing performance. New Pentium II chips for portable computers would move up to 266 and 300MHz, Rissmann said. Intel would also lower their power consumption to 1.7 volts to increase battery life. Intel expected Pentium II chips to make up about half of its shipments by the middle of 1998, and 90 percent by the end of next year. They make up about 25 percent of shipments now. Standard Pentium chips comprise about 70 percent of today's production, and were expected to be virtually phased out in the third quarter of 1998, Rissmann said. Financial analysts have also raised concerns that Intel was cutting prices to speed acceptance of Pentium II chips. It cut prices up to 40 percent last month after similar cuts in August. Rissmann said the transition to Pentium II was going as fast as expected. "The price cuts were supported by reductions in production cots," he said. ((Neal Boudette, Frankfurt Newsroom, +49 69 756525 frankfurt.newsroom@reuters.com)) REUTERS



To: Sector Investor who wrote (25484)12/4/1997 11:05:00 AM
From: blankmind  Respond to of 61433
 
<ot>

on the laptop, check out

pcmint.com

no pentium ii, but they do not wait for the notebook chip. the prices are great, and i am now outmoded with a pentium 200 mmx laptop with 80mb of ram. if you are a techie ("what do you have? oh, i just have a pent 233 laptop with 128 mb....", you will be outside the boundaries of what traditional suppliers offer plus you will receive much more bang for the buck. great for personal, but i would not recommend for a company.

when the pent ii's come out, gem will be one of the first.