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Technology Stocks : DELL Bear Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: rudedog who wrote (1053)6/14/1998 11:56:00 PM
From: Bilow  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 2578
 
Hi rudedog; I bought a car at the fancy used car store in
Bellevue where the MSFT millionaires shop (Park Place
Motors (sp?)).

I looked over the loan guys shoulder while he was typing up
the bill of sale, license &c. He was running straight DOS,
no windows. The bill printed on an ancient impact printer.
Sounded like a "Gorilla GX-80". :)

I just about fell out of my chair.

I asked the guy whether they were considering upgrading
to a newer machine, (they would be able to print nicer price
sheets, for instance,) and he said "not a chance" as he
aligned the form (from memory) about 5/8 of an inch out of
the dot matrix printer in order to get the print to match the
preprinted form. This was data he had just entered on
the computer.

He could have used a ball point pen, as the printer made
7 copies, and it would have been more readable.

I was amazed.

I am sure you are right on what it is businesses are
running on right now. High tech is different.

From having worked in 6 very small high tech companies,
I have concluded that most of them go under cause they
are really badly run. The owners start them up to either
make a quick buck or because they have delusions
of grandeur. The majority of the owner really have no
idea how to produce a product at low cost or that even
works. Of course they buy expensive computers, they
do everything large. Then they run out of money and
go broke. These comments are not meant to apply
to DELL, which (currently) makes money hand over foot,
just to the average failing high tech company.

-- Carl



To: rudedog who wrote (1053)6/15/1998 9:53:00 AM
From: fred woodall  Respond to of 2578
 
CPQ Up to 20% price cuts on 8 Armada Models. Armada Notebook 1505DM cost $1,599.
Gateway has reduced prices by up to 9% for its E-Series desktop PCs that use Pentium II processors. Gateway said Monday that it cut the price of its E-4200 333 PC, which uses a 333-megahertz Pentium chip, to $2,049 from $2,249.

WIRE: Apple Computer Inc. tumbled from its longtime position as the
personal-computer industry's leader in customer loyalty, reflecting the
computer maker's problems in the consumer market.
Apple's rate in getting customers to repurchase its computers dropped to 71%
in 1997 from 81% a year earlier, according to an annual customer-loyalty survey
by ZD Market Intelligence, a market research firm in La Jolla, Calif.
At the same time, mail-order vendor Gateway Inc. moved into first place
among top vendors, by increasing its repurchase rate to 75% from 72% a year
ago. Analysts say Gateway's rise is in part due to that company's popularity
among customers wishing to configure computers themselves.
Coming in second, just ahead of Apple, was Hewlett-Packard Co., whose
repurchase rate jumped to 72% from 58% a year earlier. ZD Market analysts said
H-P benefited from the strong growth of its Pavilion consumer brand.
Apple's fall in the loyalty index is largely because of the company's
failure to provide a competitive offering in the explosively growing market for
personal computers priced under $1,000, analysts say. Indeed, it was primarily
in the consumer market that Apple's repurchase rate fell. According to the ZD
Market survey of 11,900 U.S. PC customers, Apple's repurchase rate fell by
one-third among consumers over the past year while its other market segments,
including corporations, remained roughly the same.
"You can point to their lack of a viable entry in the sub-$1,000 category,"
said Dave Tremblay, a ZD Market senior industry analyst.
Apple officials acknowledge they lost ground in the consumer market last
year, but hope to remedy that this year with a new product strategy. "We admit
pretty openly that we didn't even focus on the home last year," said Phil
Schiller, the company's vice president, world-wide marketing. "What we made for
the home was not something to be proud of."
Apple's interim chief executive officer, Steve Jobs, recently unveiled a new
model called the iMac that is aimed at restoring the company's sales among
consumers. The machine, featuring a novel design, is to be priced at $1,299,
including the monitor, when it is launched later this year.
However, many analysts question how popular the iMac will prove among
buyers, because it lacks key features such as a floppy disk drive and upgraded
modem. "I don't know that it will resurrect them," Mr. Tremblay said. Apple has
stabilized its falling share of the PC market, at about 4% compared with about
10% five years ago. Analysts say the company's new strategy of focusing on its
core markets should keep it profitable for at least a few more quarters, while
it taps pent-up demand among its customers with upgraded products.
In other findings from the ZD Market survey, Dell Computer Corp.'s
repurchase rate jumped to 69% from 58% a year earlier, Compaq Computer Corp.'s
rate stayed about the same at 60%, and Packard Bell NEC Inc.'s rate plunged to
33% from 46%. Analysts said Packard Bell suffered from lingering consumer
perceptions that its quality and service lags behind the competition. Even
though the Sacramento, Calif., computer maker has invested heavily in recent
years to address those issues, analysts say a stigma persists among some
buyers.
"In the past, people learned on a Packard Bell, and then they moved on," Mr.
Tremblay said.