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Technology Stocks : SYQUEST -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RagTimeBand who wrote (6808)7/7/1998 11:45:00 PM
From: Dale Stempson  Respond to of 7685
 
RE: Today's news

Emory, While today's news will only have a very minimal impact on SyQuest sales, it will be interesting to see how the stock reacts tomorrow. As you may have noticed, what is more disturbing to me than the news itself, is the way in which the EdHeads decided to handle the situation. One certainly isn't left with the impression that this Management has the best interests of the average SYQT shareholder on their priority list. It would appear that it's OK for them to spend shareholder money to call and solicit support for approval of their proposal providing mega-options for their personal accounts, but when the opportunity comes to provide timely information and put all investors on an equal level, they choose "not to make the call."

Good to hear from you. Regards - Dale



To: RagTimeBand who wrote (6808)7/8/1998 1:16:00 PM
From: RagTimeBand  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 7685
 
Does anyone know the dates of the PC EXPO? (See below)

Thanks - Emory

From a section of Computer Shopper titled PC EXPO REFERENCE
Bottom of page 463 and top of page 464:

Removable Hard Drives
A wholly different category of removable storage is the hard drive supplement, with capacities measured in gigabytes -- as with SyQuest Technology's 1GB SparQ and Iomega's Jaz 2GB drives -- and performance that's comparable to a hard drive.

Pushing the envelope for this category is SyQuest's new $599 Quest drive, which is expected to debut around show time. The Quest offers the unheard-of-capacity for removable drives of 4.7GB along with blazing performance, thanks in part to technologies like MR heads and an Ultra Wide SCSI interface that have been limited to fixed hard drives until now.

Also expected around show time is Castlewood Systems' Orb. The Orb also uses MR heads and will come in Ultra SCSI, EIDE and parallel-port versions. Its 2.2GB capacity disks will list for $29.95, costing just 1.4 cents per megabyte. Castlewood expects the Orb drive to sell for about $200, doubling the capacity that's currently available at this price.