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Microcap & Penny Stocks : MSU CORP-----MUCP -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Hawkmoon who wrote (961)5/14/1998 4:16:00 PM
From: Alf  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6180
 
Ron
Is it safe to say that 5000 was yours !
I got 1000 at 12:16 and the other 4000 at 12:30

Got no where to go but up now !
PS I liked that part about (with teeth)

Tim



To: Hawkmoon who wrote (961)5/15/1998 8:30:00 AM
From: FreedomForAll  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6180
 
This sounds like opportunity knocking if MSU would get off their duffs and make some deals. (Posted on Westell thread: Message 4467770 )

In both home and business applications, analysts estimate, Europe is about four years behind the U.S. in cyberspace. In Germany, France, and Britain, barely a fifth of homes have PCs, while in the U.S., the figure is nearer half. Internet usage is still just 7% in Germany, 6% in Britain, and 2% in France, compared with 25% in the U.S. But Europe could catch up fast. It may not have to follow the U.S. through a step-by-step evolution of chips and modems, for instance. Instead, Europeans can buy their way into the state of the art. ''To some extent, Europeans will move faster because they don't have to go through the pioneer stage,'' says William A. Etherington, general manager of IBM's Europe division.

In fact, many Europeans may skip the PC stage and jump to the Web through alternative devices. Alcatel wowed the crowd at Germany's Cebit computer show last March with a telephone equipped with a screen and built for Web-surfing. L.M. Ericsson and Nokia Corp. are promoting their latest cellular phones as Web machines. For many Europeans, though, the most likely path to the Net is the old telly. British Telecommunications PLC, which has teamed up with Microsoft Corp.'s WebTV, predicts that TV access to the Internet in Britain will grow from zero now to 3.5 million subscribers in four years. That's twice the number of current Net surfers using PCs. Cable & Wireless Communications PLC has hooked up with U.S.-based Network Computer Inc., an Oracle and Netscape Communications affiliate, for its autumn, 1998, digital TV launch. C&W intends to offer TV-based Internet access within the next 12 months.

Get it done Holloway!