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To: Stoctrash who wrote (27102)12/26/1997 10:59:00 AM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 50808
 
A "home server" you won't have to pay witholding tax on..............

news.com

Home servers coming in 1998

By Michael Kanellos
December 24, 1997, 12:35 p.m. PT

The core hardware element of corporate networks
will come to the living room next year.

Matsushita Electric, Sony, and others are expected
to announce plans or release low-cost servers for
the home next year. These servers will initially
function as Web access devices for the home, say
observers, but will in time become the nerve center
of the wired home.

Unlike their corporate counterparts, the servers will
be cheap--selling for less than $500--and based
around a wide variety of technology. Chip makers
such as Hitachi should benefit, as well as software
makers such as WebTV.

"They are not here yet, but they are likely to
become big next year and especially over the next
three years," said James Staten, a consumer
computing analyst at Dataquest. "It will be a server
to the other PCs in the home. It will have a fat
'pipe' to the Internet and smaller 'pipes' to devices
in the home." A pipe is industry parlance for a data
transmission conduit.

The move toward the home server comes as a
result of two trends: declining hardware prices and
Internet ubiquity. As hardware prices come down,
more families are going to own more than one PC.
Meanwhile, electronic devices such as telephones
are gaining capabilities that will allow them to be
hooked to the Net.

It makes sense to network all these devices, said
Staten. Without a server, consumers will have to
get an Internet account for each piece of hardware.
The home server will allow home users to
streamline their communication links.

"With $500 PCs, you are going to see families with
two PCs and one server and they will all be
connected through the Net," he said.

Matsushita will begin selling systems for "smart
homes" next year, according to reports in the online
version of Nikkei Business Publications, a Japanese
news service. Central to the smart home concept
will be a server designed specifically to control the
home LAN and the appliances attached to it.

The company will also open a 100-square-meter
model home in Shinagawa, near Tokyo, next fall as
a way to promote the technology, said Nikkei.
Other sources have said Sony is interested in the
concept.

At Comdex, Compaq chief executive officer
Eckhard Pfeiffer said that the home server was a
future market for the Houston manufacturer as well.

Although the term "server" connotes a
high-powered system, Staten said that these
machines will be anything but. Because they will
primarily function as access devices, their
processing power need not be that high.

Further, because home servers will be some
owners' third or fourth computer, cost will likely be
a paramount concern. Home servers, therefore, are
likely to use low cost processors from Mips or
Hitachi, which can cost OEMs around $10. By
contrast, low-end Intel chips cost twice that, he
said. Processors by Mips, Hitachi, and others are
also tailored to use cheaper, embedded operating
systems.

One company that could become a big software
provider in this area is WebTV, Staten
conjectured. WebTV 3, the next iteration of the
WebTV concept, will likely contain features that
will allow a WebTV box to function as a server.

How these devices will link to the outside world
remains in flux, said Staten. In the near term, home
server systems will likely be linked together through
telephone lines. In the future, cable will act as the
link between the home server and the outside world
while wireless technology will link the home server
to the wired appliances used inside.



To: Stoctrash who wrote (27102)12/26/1997 2:53:00 PM
From: John Rieman  Respond to of 50808
 
MVP customer.......................................................

ijumpstart.com

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