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To: Paul Engel who wrote (27686)6/29/1998 12:17:00 AM
From: Investor A  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 33344
 
Pauleron,

Don't feel so free to post to me!

Do you want to see the what is Celeron in Intel thread?

Celeron? A name proves that the incompetent dancing scientists were not capable to modify the stolen technology from Alpha Technology for better performance. A chip for the uninformed poor victim. A splendid name to rename an inferior product to cheat the public without hurting the original brand name. A product to ensure the buyers would get less quality if they choose to pay less.



To: Paul Engel who wrote (27686)6/29/1998 6:55:00 AM
From: Dave  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 33344
 
Paul and Fuchi:

RE: Asia and Intel

Ibexx posted this article about Vietnam and Intel....

Intel to Dominate Vietnam's PC Market by 2000

June 26, 1998 (HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam) -- Intel Corp. will dominate the
Vietnamese market in the coming years, with annual turnover expected to be US$1
billion by the year 2000.
John Davies, Intel's newly-appointed vice president and general manager of Intel in the
Asia Pacific, made the announcement to the local press on his first visit to Vietnam since
taking office in February.

Davies told BizTech that Intel sees a PC market of 800,000 PCs by the year 2000 --
three PCs per 100 people.

Intel is marketing its latest technology, the Celeron microprocessor , in Vietnam. It
started by showcasing it at the INTEL'98 exhibition .

During his stay in Ho Chi Minh City to keynote the show, Davies reassured local
resellers that Intel will continue its technical support to Vietnam's information industry.

"There is a lot of help to be given here in Vietnam to create a real market," Davies said.
"We have organized a series of training courses and seminars for users and distributors."

With these activities, Intel wants to bring understanding to local people about how to
use new technologies for business, Davies said.

Davies also said that Intel sees in Vietnam a government and a media community that
have a strong commitment to developing IT technology .

"We will implement our promises to help them to make Vietnam's IT 20 00 master plan
come true," Davies said.

Analysts said that for the time being there are no competitors yet with Intel chips in the
local market. The recent lawsuit alleging an Intel monopoly is a matter for the United
States, not the Asia Pacific or Vietnam, Davies said.

Asked for incentives to cope with the currency crisis in the region and in Vietnam,
Davies said Intel's products must be better, cheaper and more efficient to users in
Vietnam.

"We have to help both users and suppliers get more understanding that using PCs and
related applications will help their work and make their business cost-effective," Davies
said.

Davies said his trip to Vietnam this time is to outline his vision of the Internet as a major
growth engine of Vietnam.

"We want to let local users know about the road to E-business, starting from an entry
point of buying a Pentium II processor-based PC and moving on to the access point of
connecting with an intranet or the Internet, establishing a Web site and then conducting
business transactions such as back-office integration and order fulfillment," Davies said.

Davies said Intel has set up software labs in Shanghai (China) and Bangalore (India),
but will not do so in Vietnam in the coming years.

Davies said the geographic diversity of Intel's business helped it weather economic
problems in various parts of the world. "The currency crisis in Southeast Asia, including
Vietnam, is one of our challenges," he added. "Despite the challenge, we are more
excited than ever about the future of computing and our role in it."

Davies said that last year, there were more than 120,000 PCs shipped in Vietnam,
according to the International Data Corp. That now makes the number of PCs in
Vietnam 240,000 units.

(David Tran, Asia BizTech Correspondent)