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Technology Stocks : 3Com Corporation (COMS) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Thomas George Warner who wrote (12998)1/8/1998 12:20:00 AM
From: chirodoc  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 45548
 
<<<<,unless there is a market and they can make money.

......why do you think sony bought a portion of nextlevel systems--and do you think with their prowess they are going to only make boxes that go on top of tv sets? come on man, what are you thinking?



To: Thomas George Warner who wrote (12998)1/8/1998 5:56:00 PM
From: chirodoc  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 45548
 
"Sony and General Instrument will play key roles in the future digital cable and satellite TV business, and in bringing to market exciting, new digital products that are both cable and satellite consumer friendly," said Gary Myer, president of Digital Network Solutions of America, a unit of Sony Electronics Inc., which is based in Park Ridge, NJ.

.......products that are "cable" friendly--looks like msft, sony, and others are all thinking this cable thing. let's hope that coms can execute this time!!!!



To: Thomas George Warner who wrote (12998)1/8/1998 7:03:00 PM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 45548
 
Microsoft unveils plans for car dashboard computer

Reuters Story - January 07, 1998 19:12
%BUS %ENT %US %APL %NL %DPR %AUT %ADV COMS PHGS V%REUTER P%RTR

By Martin Wolk
SEATTLE, Jan 7 (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp., in its latest
bid to expand its market far beyond the desktop, unveiled
software Wednesday that will power a new class of
dashboard-mounted, voice-activated automobile computers.
The software giant, which dominates the market for personal
computer software, also said it planned to ship a version of
its Windows CE operating system for hand-held devices that will
compete directly with 3Com Corp.'s popular PalmPilot.
Both products will be made by a variety of manufacturers
and begin to show up in retail stores by midyear, Microsoft
Senior Vice President Craig Mundie said in an interview before
a speech at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
While Microsoft labeled the dashboard-mounted system an
Auto PC, the first-generation devices will have more in common
with car stereos than personal computers, and Mundie was quick
to quash any notion that drivers would use them to surf the
Internet while commuting.
Mundie said the product would feature an AM-FM stereo and
CD player, but also would be able to accept voice commands and
translate text messages to a synthetic voice output. That would
allow users to listen to electronic mail messages, traffic
reports or navigational directions.
Future applications will allow the devices to be integrated
with cellular telephones, pagers and the diagnostic system of
the car itself, Mundie said.
He said taxi and bus fleet operators and traveling sales
representatives were among the potential customers.
"I actually think the device is quite useful to everyone,"
Mundie said.
The devices, from manufacturers including Clarion Corp. of
America, could start at less than $1,000. Microsoft is in
discussion with auto manufacturers, though because of long
design cycles the devices will not be available as factory
options until the model year 2000 at the earliest, Mundie said.
Microsoft labeled its second new platform the Palm PC -- to
the great irritation of executives at 3Com's Palm Computing
unit, who said their lawyers would be watching carefully to
ensure its trademarks and copyrights are protected.
"It's absolutely clear that they're trying to leverage the
huge success we've had," said Donna Dubinsky, president of the
3Com division. "The selection of that particular name for
products that are targeted at our products -- calling that a
coincidence would be a bit naive."
Mundie said Microsoft was using Palm PC as a generic name
for the platform, and he said the Windows-powered devices would
feature a more readable screen and a more flexible way to input
data than the PalmPilot.
With more than 1 million units sold since the introduction
of the shirt pocket-sized Pilot in April 1996, the 3Com device
has the most successful product launched to date in the
category of personal digital assistants, tiny computers mainly
used to manage contacts, calendars and messages.
Microsoft has tried to edge into the field several times,
but Mundie said the company has been gaining momentum
especially since the launch of version 2.0 last fall.
He said 500,000 hand-held personal computers had been
shipped since the launch of Windows CE in October 1996,
including 170,000 in the past two or three months.
The hand-held PCs feature a "clamshell" opening,
Windows-style screen and a tiny keyboard and include versions
of Microsoft applications such as Word and Excel.
The new pen-based Palm PCs will feature a much smaller
screen and no keyboard but will record voice messages and have
the ability to recognize handwriting or record handwritten
notes and images.
Philips Electronics NV said it would introduce
its Nino 300 personal companion in the second quarter at a
suggested retail price of $400 to $500, compared with less than
$300 for the PalmPilot.