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Technology Stocks : C-Cube -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DiViT who wrote (29867)2/23/1998 6:21:00 PM
From: J.S.  Respond to of 50808
 
David,

I agree with you. However, if you would allow me to make one
suggestion that may be helpful to those like James and others.

When posting a general article which gives some background, post it
as a response to the initial board message 1 (or 0) rather than the
most recent response. This would cue people in and stimulate more
focused discussions. On Usenet boards many discussions can be carried
on simultaneously by an equivalent and explicit manner. The post
could then be the start of a new (sub)thread if the information
contained therein warranted it.

I think the FAQ idea would be very helpful to others as it would
allow people to be able to more readily identify how a particular
post may relate to CUBE's earnings, such as the Japanese market
segment for Divicom.

The easier it is for people to read this thread and understand
what a great deal C-Cube stock is the faster this stock will
skyrocket.

Take Care,
Joe



To: DiViT who wrote (29867)2/23/1998 8:44:00 PM
From: John Rieman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
Intel is still going to put 3D, Modem, and DVD on the mother board. Would they work with C-Cube on the DVD piece???????????????

ijumpstart.com

Briefs

<Picture><Picture><Picture>

Intel Changes Tune on Media Processors
Intel Corp. [INTC] officials confirmed they're working on a motherboard architecture that incorporates a modem, 3D, DVD and audio playback capabilities on one chip. The company initially dismissed some of the early media processor work done by Chromatic Research Inc., Samsung Semiconductor and Phillips Semiconductors' TriMedia division but may integrate multimedia functions in software on a media co-processor. Such a strategy would rely more heavily on the Pentium II. On the processor front, Intel's first chip targeted at the sub-$1,000 PC market is code-named Covington and scheduled to ship in the next few months. By year's end Intel also plans to ship a notebook version of the I740 3-D chip, leveraging the expertise of recently acquired Chips and Technologies Inc.