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To: Brian Hutcheson who wrote (3595)1/8/1998 2:29:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Respond to of 6843
 
Brian - Re: "The last time it looked this bad was in 1994 . "

That should tell you how useful charts are - Guess what Intel's stock has done since 1994?

As I recall, Intel was about $16 at the end of 1994 - and is $72 3/4 today.

That's about a 454% increase.

Come to think of it - wasn't AMD at $25 at the end of 1994 - your little charts should tell you that - right?

And today, AMD is not up 454% since then is it?

More like DOWN 35%.

But your charts probably tell you that AMD is headed to the moon and Intel is headed for the bit bucket.

I wonder what your charts told you at the end of 1994 - that AMD was going to the moon - I'll bet!

Paul



To: Brian Hutcheson who wrote (3595)1/8/1998 2:33:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6843
 
Brian

infoworld.com

Paul



To: Brian Hutcheson who wrote (3595)1/8/1998 2:58:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6843
 
Brian - Re: "Intel needs all the business it can get if it is to maintain is level of overvaluation in the stockmarket .

Yep, and they keep getting it!

Check this out!

{===========================}

techweb.com

Dell Lands Huge PC Contract
( 1/07/98; 1:43 p.m. EST)
By Marianne Kolbasuk McGee , InformationWeek

Ford Motor signed a multimillion-dollar deal to
buy more than 10,000 PCs from Dell, which
beat out IBM, Gateway 2000, and other major
PC vendors for the contract.

Ford buys most of its PC products, including
servers, desktops, and laptops, from IBM and
Dell, a Ford spokesman said. "We're trying to
simplify the complexity of the procurements as
the cost of supporting all these products goes
up," he said.

Dell won this latest contract based on price and
Ford's "previous good experience in dealing
with Dell," among other factors, the spokesman
said.

The PCs, most with 32 megabytes of RAM and
200-MHz Pentium processors running
Windows, will be used initially for Microsoft
Office, e-mail, and Internet applications by
users in Ford's Dearborn, Mich., facilities, the
spokesman said. The desktops may also be
used in other larger IT initiatives the company is
evaluating, he said.

Although Ford has a number of large desktop
procurements during most years, the Dell deal,
signed about a week ago, is "unusually large,"
he said.
Financial terms of the contract haven't been
completed.

{=========================}
So, corporate sales are slowing down, eh?

Every little bit helps!

Paul