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To: soup who wrote (6913)12/19/1997 10:40:00 PM
From: Sowbug  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 213173
 
Friday December 19, 7:04 pm Eastern Time
FOCUS-Jobs to remain in top job at Apple, for now
(Adds analysts comments, details)
By Therese Poletti

SAN FRANCISCO, Dec 19 (Reuters) - Apple Computer Inc. said Friday it will not name a chief executive before the end of the year, as it had previously hoped, keeping co-founder Steve Jobs as interim CEO for a while longer.

Jobs' presence, however, is seen by industry executives as complicating the search for a replacement for Gilbert Amelio, who was ousted by Apple's board in July.

It was just one year ago, on the Friday before Christmas, that Apple bought Jobs' company, Next Computer, for $400 million, and Jobs made a triumphant return as an adviser to Amelio at the company that shoved him out in 1985.

Since then, his presence has shaken up the company and he was named interim CEO in September.

''He cuts quite a figure,'' said Lou Mazzucchelli, an analyst at Gerard Klauer & Mattison. While Jobs is on the board, Mazzucchelli said, he has authority but no real responsibilty, and would loom over anyone who takes on the CEO job.

''A CEO needs to have a balance of responsibility and authority,'' Mazzucchelli said. ''Therein lies the problem.''

Late in September, Apple was believed to have narrowed its CEO search to about four candidates, but two of the reported candidates took other jobs.

Joe Costello, the head of Cadence Design Systems Inc., left to head up Michael Milken's high-tech education company, Knowledge Universe, and David Dorman, an executive vice president at SBC Communications Inc., left in late October to head up PointCast Inc.

Last week, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that a top Sun Microsystems Inc. executive, Ed Zander, was offered the job but reportedly turned it down because Jobs would not agree to leave the board.

Sun Microsystems has in the past declined to comment on speculation about rumors that Zander, who is president of its hardware unit, was a leading candidate. Sun officials did not return calls seeking comment.

''There has been a lot of discussion about the candidates ... but we just haven't found the right match for Apple yet,'' said Apple spokeswoman Katie Cotton. ''Therefore, the search is going to continue in 1998,'' she said.

Executive recruiting firm Heidrick & Struggles is still conducting the search in conjunction with Apple's board.

In Silicon Valley, the rumor mill was quiet about any other new candidates, and industry executives said that everyone close to the search was mum on the topic.

Now with Apple's typically busiest quarter nearing its end, analysts and investors are focused on how Apple is doing, especially with its new G3 Macintoshes.

''I had not expected a CEO,'' said Daniel Kunstler, a J.P. Morgan analyst. ''For the next couple of quarters, it's not a problem. Since Fred Anderson (Apple's chief financial officer) is there as a pillar of operations, they could live with that for awhile.''

Kunstler said Apple has clearly taken some appropriate steps to stave off its declining sales, such as its new distribution strategies and new products.

Separately, the Cupertino, Calif.-based computer maker said it will not introduce a low-cost network computer at MacWorld next month. Some industry executives had said Apple would do so.

Apple stock fell 12.5 cents TO $13.69 on Nasdaq, near its 52-week low of $12.75.

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To: soup who wrote (6913)12/20/1997 12:01:00 PM
From: FR1  Respond to of 213173
 
>They can't be this dumb, can they?<

It's worse than that. Basically, the justice department told Microsoft back in 1995 not to bundle applications into the operating system because it would kill competition for the application market.

Microsoft ignored this because they have never been beaten and the leadership is surrounded by yes people. On Meet the Press just two weeks ago I watched the #2 guy at Microsoft being asked point blank: "Do you think Microsoft should be allowed to bundle something like Quicken in the OS - thereby killing the accounting market?". His exact answer was "I'm no lawyer but as far as I am concerned yeah, why not?". I could not believe my eyes!

They also have this train comming:
1) Everyone will shortly have a dedicated line to the internet.
2) Computer: You will buy a cheap box with a advanced Netscape browser on it.
3) OS: The browser is the OS - you don't need anything else.
4) Daily Work: Everything you want and need is done on the web.
5) Storage: Your hard disk is located at your ISP.
6) Applications: ISP provides them free except exotic ones - you rent them for pennies an hour.
7) Backups: You have local ability but the ISP does it for you daily.
8) Printouts: ISP knows your printer and prints to it.
9) Downtime: When was the last time your electricity and phone went down?



To: soup who wrote (6913)12/20/1997 10:38:00 PM
From: Bill Jackson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 213173
 
Soup, I see he removed 3.02, 'with ease', with 4.04 you need to remove the hard drive, open it up, and with a grinder burnish the platters until they are shiny bright. Hammer the spindle square, and re-assemble it, and hope it does not return.
All fairly simple processes.

It would be easy for MS to make win98 run alone and allow you to use any browser at all. However Goebbels is still alive and well. He runs the PR dept at MSFT. And so MSFT will preach the "big lie" and do whatever they like. The DOJ's slowness and the large tribe of lawyers at MSFT will delay it all until NS is dedd.

Bill