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


To: Elwood P. Dowd who wrote (33836)10/5/1998 5:13:00 PM
From: BILL CHOW  Respond to of 97611
 
Hi All:

Is this a buy opportunity?

members.tripod.com

Cheers



To: Elwood P. Dowd who wrote (33836)10/5/1998 5:54:00 PM
From: John Koligman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 97611
 
CPQ getting into software in a bigger way...

By the way, do most of you read this stuff anyway, or should I post these articles as I find them???

John



Compaq's software shift
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
October 5, 1998, 12:45 p.m. PT

First, it was consulting. Now, Compaq will
move into the software market with discrete,
server-level applications that will likely come
out later this year.

Selling software as a
separate,
independent product
represents a shift in
strategy as well as a
revenue opportunity
for the computing
giant. Compaq has
been developing server software for years,
but for the most part, it has been
incorporated as an element of the company's
hardware, or licensed to industry
organizations. These products were not sold
as separate products in their own right.

Compaq's acquisition of Digital Equipment
and Tandem, however, have opened the
door to selling enterprise-level applications,
said Vince Gayman, marketing manager of
the High Availability Server Products
Division at Compaq, because both
companies came with a wealth of enterprise
software.

The first wave of Compaq-branded software
products will come out in the relatively near
future, he said.

Gayman declined to elaborate, but said that
some of the first Compaq products will likely
target server and storage management.
Applications to coordinate server activity
when servers are geographically separated,
for example, will likely emerge from the
company. Other applications will enhance
transaction processing.

Most will exist to support Microsoft's
Windows NT operating system. "Compaq
will come out with layered products" for
Windows NT, he said.

For the most part, the company will avoid
product segments where Microsoft has an
already established lead, Gayman said,
adding that "in some spaces, we will
compete." The products largely will be sold
through system integrators and consultants
and will be able to work on servers from a
variety of vendors, he noted.

While analysts agreed that the move makes
sense for Compaq, the company will have to
tweak its internal organization to make the
effort work. Compaq's products, for instance,
will inevitably have to support the leading
operating system platforms in the server
arena to thrive, according to Jon Oltsik, an
analyst with Forrester Research.

"I think it's a wise move on their part. The
market is well established, but it's wide
open," he said. "But they will have to support
other platforms. If they are serious about it,
they will have to support Solaris, HP-UX
[HP's Unix operating system]."

To succeed, Compaq will probably have to
set up a separate software division such as
Sun, which, in turn, will require Compaq to
invest resources into pre-sales and
consulting support.

Roger Kay, computing analyst for
International Data Corporation, added that
Compaq's move reflects a larger trend
among hardware vendors to discover
untapped, ancillary revenue streams.

"Everybody is whispering about alternative,
profitable revenue streams now that most of
the joy has been taken out of hardware
sales," he said.

Related news stories
• Compaq forecasts profit from DEC October 2, 1998

• Compaq plans big storage push October 1, 1998