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Technology Stocks : 3Com Corporation (COMS) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mr. E2u who wrote (17814)6/19/1998 2:54:00 PM
From: joe  Respond to of 45548
 


>>Also by watching the ask and bid it looks to me that some shorts are trying to take advantage of the bounce back off $27.5 resistance.<<

We didn't really put much pressure on the 25 1/2 pt resistance,
which from the past was really between 25 1/2 to 25 3/4.

I think what's happened, is that first thing in the morning,
there was strong news that the merger speculation was just
rumors. Momentum was lost from this. Also, it's expiration
friday which keeps people away, and friday itself keeps
people away from holding over the weekend.

Anytime, the volume gets low, you can expect COMS to sink.
Intraday volume has been progressively slowing.

It will be interesting to see the end of day activity.

joe



To: Mr. E2u who wrote (17814)6/19/1998 10:53:00 PM
From: Mang Cheng  Respond to of 45548
 
"PalmPilot, Netscape tie targets business users"

By Jim Davis
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
June 19, 1998, 3:30 p.m. PT

In yet another example of how 3Com's Palm Computing
subsidiary is making a big push into large corporations,
Netscape Communications announced this week that its
browser software will soon offer features which allow
3Com's handheld computers to make better use of
corporate applications.

Netscape's browser software
will allow for synchronization
of Palm Computing address
books with corporate
information directories stored
in central servers. By
synchronizing new or
changed names, addresses,
and phone numbers stored on
the PalmPilot organizer in
Netscape Directory Server
software, users can keep their roaming devices up-to-date
or add information to corporate database servers at the
end of the day.

For Palm Computing, the agreement is part of a larger
push to move the popular devices from the realm of
consumer gadget to corporate business tool.

The news follows a similar deal with Oracle. At PC Expo,
Palm Computing and Oracle showed technology that lets
Palm III and PalmPilot users take a snapshot of corporate
databases with them on sales calls, as one example of the
technology.

To date, the market for handheld computers largely has
been driven by individual professionals who buy the
devices at retail stores. But as features such as paging
and Internet features become more sophisticated,
corporate sales will make up more of the overall market, a
recent Dataquest study found.

Meanwhile, the Palm Computing has plans to add still
more communications capabilities to the Palm platform.
But it isn't going to add heftier screens and keypads to
the consumer version, unlike devices that are hitting the
market now--and bigger handhelds that will come out this
fall--based on the Microsoft's Windows CE operating
system.

"We haven't even hit the curve yet [in this form factor],"
said Ed Colligan, vice president of marketing for Palm
Computing in an interview with CNET NEWS.COM.
"These devices are just starting to be looked at by
enterprises and we haven't even reached a fraction of all
the possible consumers," he noted.

Large corporations tend to take anywhere from 12 to 18
months to "qualify" a new platform for use by employees,
industry observers say, and Palm is starting to hit its
stride in this regard. Underscoring its momentum, IBM
started selling its own branded version of the Palm Pilot in
late 1997 instead of the Windows CE devices.

Even in 1997, the PalmPilot accounted for more than 63
percent of the handheld market, up from 51.7 in 1996,
according to the study. Over 1 million units of the popular
3Com handheld were shipped last year alone, and
company officials say the new Palm III is selling at a very
rapid pace.

The new features will be available when Netscape
Communicator 4.5 arrives later this summer, according to
the companies.

news.com

Mang