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Technology Stocks : INFOSEEK (GO) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tim Luke who wrote (5331)4/28/1998 9:18:00 PM
From: MR. PANAMA (I am a PLAYER)  Respond to of 9343
 
RUMOUR...DOJ will buy SEEK that will be cheaper than having MSFT do so and fighting Bill and His Tremendously Brainier Group fer years in court....hahahahahahaa oh and do not buy or sell 1 share till you all check with that Sporty Janet Reno whether that is true....hahahahahahaha...

I read somewhere that She is considered to be the sexiest woman by Japanees men over 40...They have a YEN fer her.....DAMMIT JANET



To: Tim Luke who wrote (5331)4/29/1998 8:19:00 AM
From: cm  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 9343
 
Oh, Tim and Jorge... Disney & The Internet...

Just lifted this from a YHOO poster... it's from Dow Jones...
Happy SEEK-ing, Tim. And DON'T ignore the possibility as
Jorge pointed out of a SEEK plus DIS plus NSCP arrangement.
The Yahoo! poster also includes a reference to a negative
Forbes article about dumping search engines. I include this
for spice. I'll read that article later... and find its
flaws. Happy SEEKing, c m

*********************

Forbes Magazine is "Internet Search companies - Dump Them" Read the article.
forbes.com

Also, Disney has plans....
Disney Chmn Eisner Hints At Internet 'Portal' Move
By Anthony Palazzo
HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. (Dow Jones)--Expect moves from Walt Disney Co.
(DIS) that will place Disney's news, children's and sports offerings front-and-center
when Internet users log on.
"We will be aggressive competitors on the Internet," Chairman and Chief Executive
Michael Eisner said Tuesday evening. "We will be aggressive competitors on the
Internet as you enter the Internet."
Eisner, speaking at the annual convention of the Society of American Business Editors
& Writers, declined to provide further details on Disney's plans except to nearly rule out
any large Internet-related acquisitions.
But his remarks point to some form of partnership with a so-called Internet "portal"
such as an on-line service or a browser-software maker. Placement on these Internet
on-ramps is coveted because of the large number of viewers that pass through.
Candidates for a Disney partnership run the gamut from the leading online service,
America Online Inc. (AOL), to Netscape Communications Corp. (NSCP), whose
browser software channels traffic to Netscape's Netcenter Web site. Netscape is in the
midst of building up the site's content.
Other potential partners include Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), which owns an on-line
service and the Internet Explorer browser, or even Yahoo Inc. (YHOO), the search
engine and content site that many Internet surfers have set as the starting point for their
on-line sessions.
Disney "will be one of the few companies that actually has strong brands in news, in
kids and in sports" on the Internet, Eisner said.
He was referring to Web sites built around Disney's ABC news programming, Disney
children's shows, and its ESPN sports programs.
While Disney plans to be a player on the Internet, don't expect it to begin making pricey
acquisitions.
"The chances of our company making a sizable acquisition are highly unlikely," Eisner
said. "Everything is too expensive."
During his speech, Eisner also declared Disney's purchase of ABC a success, saying the
merger was one of the 30% of corporate marriages that work out well.
Eisner said the other 70% fail because of their high cost, because their strategic
justification doesn't really exist, or culture clashes.
Before buying ABC, Disney was having difficulty placing its shows with the big media
conglomerates that were assembled in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Eisner said.
"This ability to have access for Disney programming is essential," he said.
- By Anthony Palazzo; 714-739-5538; tony.palazzo@cor.dowjones.com
"Dow Jones News Service"
"Copyright(c) 1998, Dow Jones & Company, Inc."
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