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Technology Stocks : All About Sun Microsystems -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Michael Watkins who wrote (9252)4/23/1998 7:24:00 AM
From: 2brasil  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 64865
 
this will do---- IBM and Intel join forces on network computers

By Richard Melville

NEW YORK, April 22 (Reuters) - In a new move aimed at jump-starting demand for its fledgling network computer business,
IBM(IBM - news) will announce on Thursday it is teaming with Intel Corp.(INTC - news), the chip giant and personal
computer standard-bearer, on future products in the area.

Under the partnership, the companies will work to optimize Java OS for Business -- a network computer operating system that
IBM is co-developing with Sun Microsystems Inc.(SUNW - news) -- to run on Intel processors.

International Business Machines Corp. also said it would build Intel processors into future versions of its Network Station line
of network computers.

Network computers are low-cost machines that depend on the processing power of large centralized computers known as
servers. The devices, commonly referred to as NCs, are designed as an easy-to-manage alternative to corporate networks
composed of personal computers.

Until now, the company has used its own PowerPC processors in the devices. IBM will offer customers an option of
processors starting in 1999.

The moves signal a shift in the development of the market for NCs, which companies like Sun and Oracle Corp.(ORCL -
news) have touted as a successor to PCs -- an Intel stronghold -- on corporate desktops.

By extension, that vision has also pitted Sun in a bitter rivalry with Microsoft Corp.(MSFT - news), whose Windows operating
system dominates desktop computing.

In contrast, IBM -- one of the few companies actually selling significant volumes of NCs as well as billions of dollars worth of
PCs -- has taken a measured approach. Analysts said the Intel pact dovetailed with IBM's strategy in NCs, one that puts
business considerations ahead of vision.

''We have called IBM the pragmatists in this area, and this is another clear example of that,'' said Greg Blatnik, an analyst at
Redwood City, Calif.-based Zona Research.

Blatnik said the deal also showed the powerful sway Intel has gained over the keepers of corporate purses even in an area
where the company was not perceived as a major player.

''This may be the ultimate confirmation of the power of the 'Intel inside' branding effort,'' he said.

While the teaming of the companies will almost certainly bring more credibility to the development of an NC marketplace,
neither is pinning huge expectations on the segment.

''We see this as an adjunct to the PC market; we don't see it as a replacement,'' said Barbara Dawson, director of software
strategy for Intel's Business Platform Group.

For its part, Intel has sought to guide development in a way that preserves compatibility with its existing products.

That approach appears to have succeeded, as IBM has found some customers are more willing to consider NC installations
when Intel chips are involved.

''There is an interest on the part of at least some (corporate) purchasers to have Intel as an architecture,'' said Art Olbert, vice
president for business development at IBM. ''We think this announcement will give people more confidence to buy.''

While adding Intel as a partner brings more visibility to the segment, Olbert said the company was not broadening its target
market for NCs or Java OS for Business. They are mainly aimed at transaction-intensive business areas such as bank tellers
and airline reservation clerks.