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To: Paul Engel who wrote (72650)2/1/1999 7:14:00 PM
From: Jim McMannis  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 186894
 
Paul,
RE:"You miss the point - INTEL IS and WAS NOT RESPONSIBLE for the
loss of privacy."...

Paul, I'm not blaming Intel. Heck, they were probably duped by the software industry. Intel is a company of engineers run by engineers, they aren't psycologists or sociologists. They can easily correct this. It's not even a bug.

RE:"And Intel's CPU ID has a lot to offer in real value - despite the fear-mongering that you
put up.

Get over it Jim - there is no guarantee to privacy"...

I don't dissagree but I expect Intel will pull back and evaluate.
Luckily they aren't as short sighted as you. If PR was left up to you
all you'd say is S$rew you...this ID thing is good for you. Take it or else.

Jim



To: Paul Engel who wrote (72650)2/1/1999 8:46:00 PM
From: Xpiderman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Intergraph final quarter misses market forecasts big time.

biz.yahoo.com

HUNTSVILLE, Ala., Feb 1 (Reuters) - Computer workstation maker Intergraph Corp. (Nasdaq:INGR - news), hurt by special charges and expenses to cover its antitrust suit against Intel Corp. (Nasdaq:INTC - news), on Monday reported a fourth quarter loss steeper than market expectations.

The quarterly net loss totaled 43 cents per share, unchanged from last year's, but short of average analysts' forecast of a loss of 16 cents per share.

Per share results include expenses of 23 cents related to costs of employee terminations, asset write-offs, and its transition to outsourcing of its manufacturing operation.

For the year ended Dec. 31, Intergraph reported a net loss of 41 cents per share, including special items and manufacturing operations changes and gain on asset sales, on revenues of $1.033 billion. Net loss for 1997 was $1.46 per share on revenues of $1.124 billion.

Orders for new systems during the quarter rose 22 percent to $242 million. For 1998, orders rose 3 percent to $794 million from a year earlier. Its computer hardware and software businesses are ''on track'' for a profitable 1999, the company said.

Costs associated with the Intel litigation may prove to be a drag throughout 1999, the company warned. Intergraph lodged its suit against Intel in November 1997 for patent infringement, anti-competitive behavior and antitrust violations.

Prior to the announcement, Intergraph shares rose 19 cents to $5.25 on the Nasdaq.




To: Paul Engel who wrote (72650)2/2/1999 12:29:00 AM
From: exhon2004  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Paul:

re <<Get over it Jim - there is no guarantee to privacy.>>

You are so right. I worked for an outfit that sold "stuff" to a Large Government Account located at Ft. Meade. Place was a black hole for equipment. Can't imagine them being frustrated by a lack of access to information or communications to or from any source they desire.

Best Regards,

Greg Gimelli